Organic Matter Found In Canadian Meteorite
eldavojohn writes "From what sounds like the opening of an X-Files episode, Canadian scientists have reportedly found in a meteorite organic matter older than the sun at Tagish Lake in Canada. From the article: '"We mean that the material in the meteorite has been processed the least since it was formed. The material we see today is arguably the most representative of the material that first went into making up the solar system." The meteorite likely formed in the outer reaches of the asteroid belt, but the organic material it contains probably had a far more distant origin. The globules could have originated in the Kuiper Belt group of icy planetary remnants orbiting beyond Neptune. Or they could have been created even farther afield. The globules appear to be similar to the kinds of icy grains found in molecular clouds — the vast, low-density regions where stars collapse and form and new solar systems are born.' The article implies that life could potentially survive in these meteorites and maybe even travel through space — supporting the theory that life may have arrived on earth and evolved from that point on."
No, apparently we're here.
I for one welcome our new organic material evolved overlords. And by overlords, I mean us.
it's just carbon compounds.
"National Security is the chief cause of national insecurity." - Celine's First Law
I knew it! Canadians are from outerspace!
WulframII - Free Online Mutiplayer 3D Tank Shooting Game
I've seen this movie... the organisms evolve... then get sprayed with napalm while Canada gets a dose of Head and Shoulders... or was it the other way round?
Ninjas use italics.
So from what I read they structures found COULD assist organic life, but are not actual evidence of them.
Cwm, fjord-bank glyphs vext quiz
Keep in mind that organic does NOT = life, just a precursor to life. Organic molecules/matter are generally just molecules containing carbon and hydrogen making a chainlike skeleton of atoms, with oxygen and/or nitrogen depending on if it is a protein. (Source). This DOES back up the hypothesis that organic molecules can form just as well outside of early earth, as in. It'll be interesting to hear just what the molecules were, but I doubt this will spawn any new theories about the extra-solar genesis of life on earth. It doesn't take special space-dust to provide organic compounds in the early earth - just the atoms from the life cycle of stars spreading heavier elements.
Ryan Fenton
Does this mean we're all Canadians!!!?
NOOOOOOOO
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
Organic matter has been found in meteorites decades ago.
Life is found most everywhere that it can reach. The only reason we have not found life in space yet is because gravity does a good job of keeping life on the planet and out of space. If there were a place on earth where life could encouter vacuum, it would be a very good bet that life would evolve to cope with it. Trees split water and create sugar using sunlight, animals create water and eat sugar. If you can conceive of a lifeform that can do both of these things, vacuum is a perfectly acceptable environment. In fact there are quite a few "anaerobic" microbes that prefer to not be around oxygen - if they could evolve to handle lower pressures they could make a good candidate for interstellar life travel.
I work for the Department of Redundancy Department.
Attributed to Anaxagoras ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anaxagoras ) in the 5th century BCE. Basically the idea the precursors to life are everywhere in the universe, allowing that life on earth may have sprung from this source.
It seems plausible. This evidence doesn't prove it though.
FTA:
Fullerene? That would explain a lot about the persistence of these structures through the process of transport and reentry.
Disclaimer: "God moves in mysterious ways His wonders to perform." - William Cowper ( for varying values of "God", "mysterious", "wonders" - symbolset )
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Im actually interested, how do you measure the age of an object so old, when its not from earth ?
I mean the amount of radioactive materials that fall apart a thousand or so years after being 'inserted' into a certain object is valid only if we know the amount on the env surrounding it.
How do we know how old this thing is without actually being sure where it came from ?
Maybe there was less of the izotope in the env. ?
Or maybe there was much, much more of it ?
This is besides the point if the rock actually contains some fossilized life forms, if its a billion years younger or older, then this fact makes a pretty big difference, right ?
I understand that the age of stars can be measured by the spectrum (iirc, as light travels further/longer it leans towards one of the edges).
I also get how we can determine how we check the basic building block of an object a milion light years away by the light spectrum too.
But the age, when we are not really sure of the exact amount of izotopes in the env. ?
Could somebody educate this fool with a friendly wikipedia link ?
What kind of "news" story makes such a big deal out of such a fundamentally important claim - "organic matter older than the Sun found in Canadian meteorites", but doesn't say exactly what makes these "globules" qualify as "organic"? The only details about the claimed "organic" matter are that they "resemble minute hollow balls with carbon-rich shells", where "minute" is vaguely implied to be smaller than 10 um^3. (a billionth the volume of a grape).
There's more info detailing that the Yukon is cold and unpopulated than any info about how this carbon is "organic".
In fact, practically all carbon on the Earth is older than the Sun. Carbon is produced in the cores of unusually massive stars, then distributed across the Universe after the star explodes in supernova or similarly huge cataclysm. Just composition of carbon, and the other "organic" elements (nitrogen, oxygen and hydrogen) essential to Earth organic chemistry, doesn't make these tiny grains accurately called "organic globules".
Maybe actual science, written by an actual journalist, could report the more important facts behind this sensational headline.
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make install -not war
I don't believe gravity is a huge impediment to life moving around:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermi_paradox.
Think about how far humankind will advance in 50 years, and whether we would be able to make a micro-replicator that we could send to other stars.
Ed Barbar, President and General Manager, Furnit USA
WRONG: ...
...
My life sci 101 class teached me that
CORRECT:
My life sci 101 class learned me that
Let's get it right, people.
--
Oh Yoshimi, they don't believe me
But you won't let those robots defeat me
iirc, only the outermost few centimeters of any incoming meteor are ever heated. If you come upon a just-crashed meteorite that is broken open, it will be cold on the inside, and the outside will be cool to the touch in (again iirc) minutes.
"A witty saying proves nothing." ~Voltaire
"d'Oh!" ~Homer
There are many examples of life that can survive in the most extreme of places.
Tbere is bacteria that lives quite happily on plutonium fuel rods inside nuclear reactors. The radiation doesn't bother them.
Thnere is bacteria that can synthesis sugars vital for life without photosynthesis from compounds which are lethal to other forms of life. Examples of this have been found at deep sea hot vents. There is even bacteria which lives off methane. Also many different kinds of bacteria and viruses (the lowest known form of life) which can place themselves into a state of suspended animation for thousands and even theoretically millions of year.
Thus, life has many ways to survive in deep space.
Michael "TheZorch" Haney
thezorch@gmail.com
http://thezorch.googlepages.com/home
He has good novels?
LOL. True story:
Recently, I was trying to chat up a very attractive girl. I mentioned in our harried conversation (she was at work) that I enjoyed reading but hadn't been to the bookstore in ages, blah blah. She told me that she, too, loved to read, and promised to bring in some of her favourites for me. Great, I thought! This could be the start of something interesting.
A few days later I stop in to see her and she smiles and points to a small bag 'o books in the corner. How sweet, right? Well, inside the bag were 4 were Dan Brown novels. Cervantes I wasn't expecting, but Dan Brown? I tried reading one of them (maybe I was wrong about him), but the absence of any writing talent in combination with an absurd plot reminded so much of high school that all I could was groan and put the book back in the bag with the others.
Haven't been back to see her since. It's been a month, but I wonder whether that's not long enough.
Evolving to handle high levels of radiation doesn't seem to be a problem for number of of species of bacteria.h ile&start=0&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&client=firefox-a&rls =org.mozilla:en-US:official
http://www.google.com/search?q=radiation+extremop
I used to have a cool sig, back when I cared
Cervantes I wasn't expecting
Nobody expects the Spanish Author!
If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
Free books for you? That was really sweet of her.
Perhaps you should have judged her by the act of giving rather than the gift. Rather than being condescending and judgmental (way to make her feel good, champ), you could have scored points and broadened her horizons by thinking about what she gave you and suggesting some other books she might have liked. Sounds like she likes shorter, punchier thrillers.
I'd have given her Gaston Leroux's "Phantom of the Opera", the collected short stories and cartoons of James Thurber, and maybe something short by literary like Ondatjee's "Running in the Family". How on earth can you know she won't like what you like unless you let her read it?
Actually, finding life is very difficult because the necessary conditions for the formation of a single celled organism only exist with very low possibilities.
Keep in mind that we have never manufactured a single living cell with functional DNA in a lab even with conditions entirely under our human control. Pasteur's Law still holds today. If we can't use thousands of years of engineering, including at least 2 decades of advanced bio-medical technology, to manufacture a single funcional cell from non-organic material, do you really expect it to form arbitrarily in space all the time?
We are the product of an extremely unlikely physical/chemical event, and we may very well be alone.
Either that, or you must be new here.
-Red
(And you're totally right, by the way. WHo gives a crap if she has awful taste in books? That would be like turning a girl away casue she doesnt play video games, or worse, likes the PS3)
Guns don't kill people, "with glowing hearts" kills people.
Mod parent up. Organic != life. They just tend to go together here on Earth.
"I'm a Laver, not a Phyto[plankton]"
I'm she'd have reacted in a similar way if she found out you read Slashdot.
Chemical reactions can occur in places other than Earth.
Dan East
Better known as 318230.
In chemistry, "organic matter" refers to hydrocarbons.
Actually, it's not a silly question at all. It's a darned good one. The short answer is that it's a "best guess".
We still don't actually *know* how the solar system formed, and until then, there's no way we can actually definitely say how old the solar system is. What we think is that the system was formed in a nebula as a big cloud of dust that gradually started to clump around a center. As the protostar gathered mass, the cloud started to spin and formed into a disc, called an accretion disc. The theory is that all of the asteroids, planets and comets formed at the same time as the sun. This theory is supported, in that some of our observations have shown accretion discs in nebulae, but we really have no way to actually *prove* that this is how our solar system formed.
The thing is... if that's how our solar system formed, then we're able to measure the age of the solar system by looking at the age of some of the other objects in the solar system. Fact is that most of the objects out in the kuiper belt and oort cloud (think in the 50-100,000 AU radius) are about 4.5-5 billion years old. Given our current model for how the solar system formed, that would mean that the sun is about the same age. There are almost certainly some objects in our solar system that are older than the system itself... either as captured objects from other solar systems (100k AU is halfway to Proxima Centauri), or as objects that were part of the nursery nebula that we formed from.
As to the original article, it's really nothing special at all. "Organic" molecules just mean carbon compounds. The solar system is full of organic molecules. Something like 2/3 of the asteroids in the solar system, especially in the outer solar system, are carbonaceous. Organic != Life. It's cool that we've found a meteorite that's older than the solar system is thought to be, and it's cool that it's carbonaceous... but that's because it's extremely rare that a carbon-based meteorite survives entry into our solar system, and it's also very rare to find a meteorite that's older than the solar system. Finding the two in conjunction is a really cool thing. But it's in now ay proof of extra-terrestrial life.
If you believe everything you read, you'd better not read. - Japanese proverb
NOBODY expects the Spanish Author! His chief weapon is surprise...surprise and fear...fear and surprise.... His two weapons are fear and surprise...and windmills.... Our *three* weapons are fear, surprise, and windmills...
Sure enough, the cow costume was hanging up next to the superhero outfit and sailors uniform. (S,Spud)