A meteorite has been discovered in an old region

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Minerals previously collected by NASA explorers are where no minerals are found in the world.
Scottish Pier "The geologists' work of researching volcanic rocks faced something that was not in our world: it was not known until now, the remaining things were under the influence of a meteor 60 million years ago." In the British Paleogeneic Volcanic Archetype (BPIP) survey, a survey of the first metoritic effect of the region revealed some questions related to the impact on the Palaeogenic and possible connection with the volcanic activity in the North Atlantic regions.



Simon Drake, a lecturer at Birkbeck University in London, concentrated on a one-meter plate in a 60-million-year lava flow. "We thought it was a volcanic electron residue," says Drake. However, the work they do with their friends under the microscope examination is Outworlders at this level, and these rare minerals have been discovered: osbornit rich in vanadium and niobium.



He had never seen these mineral forms in the world. But apart from the awakening of Wild 2 Comet, NASA's "Stardust Comet Sample Return Mission" project was one of the remnants. In addition, the unresolved Osbornit showed that it was an original meteorite. The group also believes that only natural collisions in nature, natural iron formed with mines causing larger forms under zircon press, and other exotic minerals of barricades due to shock.

A strange mineralogy is found in a 7-kilometer field and two meters of rocky. The researchers believe that the crash occurred between 60 and 61.4 million years ago.

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