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Fall That Glitters: Microscopy Reveals Stained-Glass Beauty in Ancient Meteorites [Slide Show]

Under a polarizing light microscope, chondrules—melted bits of silicate-rich material in meteorites—turn slices of the space rocks into bedazzling art

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GARDEN VARIETY CHONDRITE:
thumb: GARDEN VARIETY CHONDRITE:

GARDEN VARIETY CHONDRITE:

This meteorite, weighing seven kilograms and standing six centimeters tall, is known as the La Criolla L6  “ ordinary” chondrite....[More]

JEWELED JULESBURG:
thumb: JEWELED JULESBURG:

JEWELED JULESBURG:

Viewed through a polarizing light microscope, a thin slice through a dull-looking ordinary chondrite becomes a dazzling specimen studded with glittery bits—the chondrules....[More]

ANOTHER “ORDINARY” BEAUTY:
thumb: ANOTHER “ORDINARY” BEAUTY:
ANOTHER “ORDINARY” BEAUTY:

The Bovedy ordinary chondrite fell in Northern Ireland in 1969. Here, many of the chondrules are surrounded by fine-grained material consisting of silicate grains.

[Link to this slide]
Alan E. Rubin, University of California, Los Angeles
A VERSION FOM CHINA:
thumb: A VERSION FOM CHINA:

A VERSION FOM CHINA:

Another arresting specimen of an ordinary chondrite, again less than 10 millimeters across, was sampled from the Bo Xian chondrite, which made landfall in Zhang Wo, China—a part of Bo County, in Anhui Province— in 1977....[More]

RARE ROCK:
thumb: RARE ROCK:

RARE ROCK:

Unlike ordinary chondrites, those in the Rumuruti (R) group are rare. The only ones directly observed as they fell rained down on Rumuriti, Kenya, on January 28, 1934....[More]

CARBON-RICH CHONDRITE:
thumb: CARBON-RICH CHONDRITE:

CARBON-RICH CHONDRITE:

This rock, known as the Allende CV carbonaceous chondrite, represents one of the asteroids that were rich in organic matter and that orbited far from Earth, probably beyond three astronomical units from the sun....[More]

CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITE UP CLOSE:
thumb: CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITE UP CLOSE:

CARBONACEOUS CHONDRITE UP CLOSE:

Three large chondrules dominate this slice from a meteorite recovered in Antarctica in 2007; the slice is 3.4 millimeters across. The one at the top harbors large grains of olivine separated by devitrified glass—once-real glass that was turned into tiny grains by mild heating and other processes....[More]

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  1. 1. columba 09:02 PM 2/18/13

    This article does not provide the information that was gathered from the chondrules, which was what the article was supposed to specify on. I understand they mentioned the impact the data could have, but none was displayed or spoken of.

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