Japan’s asteroid-smashing probe reveals a surprisingly young space rock0
- From Around the Web, Space
- March 21, 2020
The carbon-rich asteroid Ryugu may have come together just 10 million years or so ago.
The carbon-rich asteroid Ryugu may have come together just 10 million years or so ago.
Inside the stout fins of a fish that prowled the shallow waters of an estuary in what is now eastern Canada about 380 million years ago, scientists have found what they call the evolutionary origins of the human hand.
Dust and sand slide down slopes on Mars in little avalanches.
So that explains it.
Researchers from the University of Southern California have been working on the predictive project for two years.
A curious set of photographs have emerged showing an alleged Sasquatch looking in through a man’s window.
The solar system formed approximately 4.5 billion years ago. Numerous fragments that bear witness to this early era orbit the sun as asteroids. Around three-quarters of these are carbon-rich C-type asteroids, such as 162173 Ryugu, which was the target of the Japanese Hayabusa2 mission in 2018 and 2019.
The animal is a common ancestor of today’s ducks and chickens
NASA told its InSight lander to thwack its shovel free of the Martian soil, and it worked.
Once upon a time, reaching the highest peak on Earth was considered a feat achievable only by a select few.