Rocks show how universe formed

Eva Dameron

Issue date: 4/19/07 Section: Culture
UNM's Meteorite Museum and Collection showcases more than 600 meteorites and is home to a half-ton meteorite.
Media Credit: Vanessa Sanchez / Daily Lobo
UNM's Meteorite Museum and Collection showcases more than 600 meteorites and is home to a half-ton meteorite.
[Click to enlarge]
by Eva Dameron

Daily Lobo



Rocks arouse more interest when they come from outer space, thus becoming meteorites.

"Asteroids tell us about the early history, the dawn of the solar system," said Horton Newsom, curator of UNM's Meteorite Museum and Collection. "The rocks are part of the story of how the solar system formed and evolved. Instead of using the world's largest telescopes to study how the solar system and universe formed, we use some of the world's most powerful microscopes to study how these things formed."

The museum is part of the Institute of Meteoritics, established

in 1944.

"We've had a long history of being involved in space exploration, well before there were rockets going off the earth," Newsom said. "It's one of the original institutes for studying objects from space."

The museum's collection holds more than 5,000 individual specimens, representing more than 600 meteorites. The star sample of the collection is a half-ton meteorite found in a farmer's field in Kansas.

"It's the second largest stony meteorite ever recovered," Newsom said. "It's called Norton County (they're named after where they're found). It came from an asteroid that melted 4.5 million years ago. That's a very interesting sample."

The museum also has a tiny sample from Mars.

Assistant curator Barbara Cohen, who has made two trips to Antarctica to search for meteorites, said there are misconceptions about them - one being that they land fiery hot.

"When the rock comes through the atmosphere, it heats up the outside, but the inside doesn't get hot," Cohen said. "The inside stays cold, so a lot of times, when you find it when it just lands, it's got frost on it. Most people think that it comes in, and it's steaming hot. We get that all the time."

She said that the other day, a man brought in a sample he claimed was found still hot.
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