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    Mystery of Britain's Largest Meteorite Solved

    With a weight that rivals a baby elephant, a meteorite that fell from space some 30,000 years ago is likely Britain's largest space rock. And after much sleuthing, researchers think they know where it came from and how it survived so long without weathering away.

    The giant rock, spanning about 1.6 feet (0.5 meters) across and weighing 205 pounds (93 kilograms), was likely discovered by an archaeologist about 200 years ago at a burial site created by the Druids (an ancient Celtic priesthood) near Stonehenge, according to said Colin Pillinger, a professor of planetary sciences at the Open University.

    Pillinger curated the exhibition "Objects in Space," which opens today (Feb. 9) and is the first time the public will get a chance to see the meteorite. The exhibition will explore not only the mystery that surrounds the origins of the giant meteorite, but also the history and our fascination with space rocks.

    As for how the meteorite survived its long stint on Earth, researchers point to the ice age.

    "The only meteorites that we know about that have survived these long ages are the ones that were collected in Antarctica," said Pillinger, adding that more recently, some ancient meteorites have been collected in the Sahara Desert. This rock came from neither the Sahara Desert nor Antarctica, but rather the Lake House in Wiltshire.

    "Britain was under an ice age for 20,000 years," Pillinger told LiveScience, explaining the climate would have protected the rock from weathering.

    At some point, the Druids likely picked up the meteorite when scouting for rocks to build burial chambers. "They were keen on building burial sites for [the dead] in much the same way the Egyptians built the pyramids," Pillinger said.

    Then, years later, an archaeologist with ties to other, famous archaeologists, likely found the rock while excavating the Druids' burial sites, he said. The archaeologist then brought the rock back to his house in Wiltshire, where its more recent residents took notice and alerted researchers.

    "The men whose house this was found at spent a lot of time opening these burial sites 200 years ago for purposes of excavating them," Pillinger said. "Our hypothesis is that the stone probably came out of one of those burial chambers."

    The meteorite is called a chondrite, a group that includes primitive meteorites that scientists think were remnants shed from the original building blocks of planets. Most meteorites found on Earth fit into this group.

    Other objects on display include a much smaller meteorite, weighing about an ounce (32 grams), and excavated from a grain pit where ancient peoples of the Iron Age stored their crops. It was discovered in the 1970s at Danebury Hill Fort in Hampshire, though it wasn't until the 1980s when scientists analyzed metal in the walnut-size object did they realize its extraterrestrial origin.

    The exhibition will also include a Damien Hirst "spot painting," which features the famous Beagle 2 spacecraft as its center spot. In addition, part of Newton's apple tree will be on display.

    The story of how researchers are uncovering the origins of these impressive specimens will astonish and delight visitors to this remarkable exhibition, which also contains letters and books charting the history of scientific interest in meteorites.  

    The Royal Society's London headquarters will house the exhibit through March 30.

    Follow LiveScience for the latest in science news and discoveries on Twitter @livescienceand on Facebook.

    What do you feel about this article?

     

    10 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
      Go figure. Thousands of years on earth and Yahoo still doesn't have a picture of it.
    • Itasca guy  •  Boone, United States  •  3 months ago
      Two Druids walk into a bar with an ancient meteorite and...........
    • Stardust  •  3 months ago
      A rock that is 1.6 feet across is not a giant rock. It's a pretty small rock.
    • BillW  •  Euless, United States  •  3 months ago
      The ancients obviously had geologists, too. I wonder if thier discussions over the strange rocks' origins became part of thier religion?
    • hydro1  •  3 months ago
      While reading, my mind switched to a Monty Python voice -it fits.
    • Bill  •  3 months ago
      Blimey! That's one bloody big rock. #$%$
    • Ridge walking  •  3 months ago
      Discovered 200 years ago and only now it is to be exhibited?
    • Otto Pilot  •  Spring Branch, United States  •  3 months ago
      Move over bacon, there's something meteor!
    • TTown  •  3 months ago
      Interesting bit of sluething by the Brits... Is this an iron meteorite? If it is, it was probably bigger than it is now, it would lose mass from oxidation.
      • tbmbuzz 3 months ago
        No, it's a chondrite, as the article says. It didn't specify whether it's an ordinary chondrite (the most common type of meteorite) or a carbonaceous chondrite. Chondrites contain a much higher proportion of silicaceous and non-ferrous minerals than iron meteorites.
      • hydro1 3 months ago
        Read what you wrote and decide if your comment was worth reading -it wasn't -so why did you hit 'post'? -learn something?
      • TTown 3 months ago
        @Hydro1 Why did you hit post, did you think trying to insult somebody would gain favor with someone? You are pretty typical of the mentally challenged I see on this site, tossing insults but never contributing.
    • Petercha  •  3 months ago
      Cool article! Now, if you like science, as I do, good. But please don't use that as an excuse to hate on Christianity/the Bible/religion, etc. There is a place in this world for both science and religion in the world. Science speaks to fact, and religion speaks to truth. Both can live comfortably side-by-side in my world. Let's keep this thread nice, folks!
      • Raptor 3 months ago
        Remember, when a volcano blows its top, God is not angry, you're just in the wrong place at the wrong time, so please don't sacrifice any virgins that might be left.
      • I ROBOT 3 months ago
        God bless the scientists!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...............................
      • Don 3 months ago
        Petercha, remember you are not alone.
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