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Meteor May Be From Martian Moon Phobos

An anonymous reader writes "Russian and NASA scientists published in the March journal of Solar System Research, the proposition that a 1980 Yemenite meteorite originated from the martian moon, Phobos. It would be the first moon rock from another planet. New Scientist has a short description and Astrobiology Magazine has the picture. Unique among the 20,000 meteorites collected, this is similar to heat-shocked charcoal and shows several mineral phases not found terrestrially."

4 of 12 comments (clear)

  1. Klendathu! by dmayle · · Score: 4, Funny

    It's off to Klendathu! The bugs are hurling meteorites!

  2. Re:Eh? by ColaMan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Sounds like what he meant to say was that it would be the first rock from another planet's moon.

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  3. Re:Eh? by AMystery · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think the phrase it meant to be parsed as, the first rock from the moon of another planet, i.e., a moon rock. That is interesting in that if true, it would give us detailed compositional information about the material of either Phobos or Demos, hmm, that isn't spelled correctly...oh well, the other moon, you know, where the red guys landed in Doom and you had to go shoot them repeatedly with the automatic shotgun (you did use the cheats, didn't you?) From reading the article (gasp) it is a very very interesting rock, that shows three different rocks in it, the material of the parent body and then material from two different impacts, all amalgomated into one meteor that then visited our fair planet.

    For those who didn't read the article, it most likely came from an object that roamed through the solar system collecting other objects (a celestial garbage truck). This is the preferred origin for both the moons of Mars, so while it might not have come from one of the moons and instead be from an object like Ceres, in any case it is interesting.

  4. Re:Sample return? by burris · · Score: 2, Informative

    We think those meteorites came from Mars but we are not certian. A sample return mission would provide certainty and may authenticate meteorites found on Earth. Further, the returned samples could be selected for how interesting the appear, rather than the random selection that falls on Earth.