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Alberta researchers help identify new minerals from meteorite found in Somalia

Around 70 grams of the meteorite, split into two pieces, was sent to the University of Alberta for classification. (Submitted by Chris Herd - image credit)
Around 70 grams of the meteorite, split into two pieces, was sent to the University of Alberta for classification. (Submitted by Chris Herd - image credit)

A 4.5-billion-year-old space rock that landed in Somalia contains two new minerals, a University of Alberta analysis has revealed.

A third new mineral was also identified Monday by American researchers.

The 15-tonne meteorite was found by prospectors searching for opal two years ago in a lush valley where camels forage.

Local herders were aware of the rock for more than five generations, according to its profile with the International Society for Meteoritics and Planetary Science. It had been used as an anvil to sharpen knives and was memorialized in folklore, songs, dances, and poems.

About 70 grams were sent to the University of Alberta's earth atmosphere science department, where it came under the purview of Chris Herd.

"What happened was during the process of classifying it, when I was looking at the slides that we had on an electron microscope, I saw some minerals that it couldn't really identify," said Herd, a professor and curator of the university's meteorite collection, in an interview.

Earlier this year, the head of the university's electron microprobe laboratory, Andrew Locock, examined and identified two new minerals. The task was made easier by the fact that the compositions had been synthesized previously in France in the 1980s.

"On the first day that he did some analysis, he told me that we had at least two new minerals inside of this meteorite," Herd said.

"You don't typically come across the minerals in sort of routine analysis like this. And so it was really exciting."

Although the crystal structure had been created in a lab previously, only once it's discovered in nature are they called minerals and named. The two new minerals have been named elaliite and elkinstantonite.

The first takes its name from the meteorite itself, called "Eli Ali" after the town near where it was found. Herd named the second after planetary scientist Lindy Elkins-Tanton because of her work exploring how planet cores are formed.

Submitted by Chris Herd
Submitted by Chris Herd

The research is being done in collaboration with UCLA and the California Institute of Technology. Herd said Chi Ma, a mineralogist at the institute, has just gone through the approval process to declare a third new mineral.

Olsenite is named after Edward J. Olsen, the former mineralogy and meteorites curator at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago who helped described several new minerals from meteorites.

"I just feel really fortunate to be involved in it," Herd said.

"Because most people in the earth and planetary sciences don't ever get a chance to describe one new mineral, let alone more than one."

The meteorite has been classified as Iron, IAB, one of 350 in that category. It is the ninth-largest meteorite ever found.

Herd presented the findings at the Space Exploration Symposium in November.

Submitted by Chris Herd
Submitted by Chris Herd

Kim Tait, senior curator of mineralogy at the Royal Ontario Museum, said although finding new minerals in meteorites is not common, they are a great place to look.

"Because these rocks have undergone shock events and high pressures and temperatures and different conditions that we would see here on Earth," she said, adding that despite the many combinations of the periodic table there are only 5,851 minerals known to humanity.

The meteorite can lead to a better understanding of how such objects are formed. Tait also notes that an iron meteorite would come from the core of a planet that no longer exists.

"We don't get a lot of chances, obviously — no chances — to sample our own core on our planet," she said.

"So having the opportunity to look at iron meteorites is very special in a lot of ways"

Herd said new mineral discoveries can yield new uses in the future.

"We're working with someone in chemistry here to synthesize these minerals to explore them a bit more," he said. "You never know."

The future of the meteorite itself is uncertain, however. The Somalian government confiscated the rock before then releasing it to miners.

Herd said it has been exported to China, where it is awaiting purchase.