Aguas Zarcas meteorite with irregular surface features. This 146g stone is on loan to the Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies from Michael Farmer. Photo: Arizona State University / SETI Institute.
March 31, 2025, Mountain View, CA -- In April 2019, rare primitive meteorites fell near the town of Aguas Zarcas in northern Costa Rica. In an article published online in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science, an international team of researchers describe the circumstances of the fall and show that mudball meteorites are not necessarily weak.
“27 kilos of rocks were recovered, making this the largest fall of its kind since similar meteorites fell near Murchison in Australia in 1969,” said meteor astronomer Peter Jenniskens of the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research Center.
The Murchison meteorite fell only two months after the first manned landing on the Moon in 1969 when researchers were ready to study moon rocks and eagerly trained their instruments on this other rock from space.
“The recovery of Aguas Zarcas, too, was a small step for man, but a giant leap for meteoritics,” said geologist Gerardo Soto of the University of Costa Rica in San José, paraphrasing Neil Armstrong’s words. “76 papers have since been written about this meteorite.”
Jenniskens teamed up with Soto to investigate the new fall.
“The fall of Aguas Zarcas was huge news in the country. No other fireball was as widely reported and then recovered as stones on the ground in Costa Rica in the last 150 years”, Soto added.
Analysis of video camera footage by the team showed that the rock entered at a near-vertical angle into Earth’s atmosphere from a WNW direction at a speed of 14.6 kilometers per second. The intense heat of collisions with the atmosphere melted (ablated) much of the rock, but there was surprisingly little sign of fragmentation.
“It penetrated deep into Earth’s atmosphere, until the surviving mass shattered at 25 km above the Earth’s surface,” said Jenniskens, “where it produced a bright flash that was detected by satellites in orbit.”
Nature was kind to this meteorite in that the fall occurred at the end of an unusually long dry season in Costa Rica.
“The Aguas Zarcas fall produced an amazing selection of fusion-crusted stones with a wide range of shapes,” said co-author and meteoriticist Laurence Garvie at the Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies at Arizona State University. “Some stones have a beautiful blue iridescence to the fusion crust.”
Many of the stones are unbroken as they landed on the relatively soft jungle and grassy surfaces. Researchers were surprised by the unusual shape of many of the rocks caused by ablation, without the relatively flat surfaces that result from secondary fragmentation.
“Other meteorites of this type are often described as mudballs, as they contain water-rich minerals,” said Jenniskens, “Apparently, that does not mean they are weak.”
The research team now believes that Aguas Zarcas is strong because it avoided collisions in space and did not have the cracks that weaken many meteorites.
“The last collision experienced by this rock was 2 million years ago,” said cosmochemist Kees Welten of UC Berkeley.
He and his team measured how long the rock was exposed to cosmic rays after it had broken off from a larger asteroid.
“We know of other Murchison-like meteorites that broke off at approximately the same time, and likely in the same event,” said Welten, “but most broke much more recently.”
The team determined the rock was about 60 centimeters in diameter when it hit the Earth’s atmosphere. From the path it traveled through the atmosphere, the team traced the meteorite back to the asteroid belt.
“We can tell that this object came from a larger asteroid low in the asteroid belt, likely from its outer regions,” said Jenniskens. “After getting loose, it took two million years to hit the tiny target of Earth, all the time avoiding getting cracked.”
Because the rock was strong and entered at a steep angle, a relatively large fraction of its mass survived to the ground.
Link to the paper:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/maps.14337
About the SETI Institute
Founded in 1984, the SETI Institute is a non-profit, multi-disciplinary research and education organization whose mission is to lead humanity’s quest to understand the origins and prevalence of life and intelligence in the Universe and to share that knowledge with the world. Our research encompasses the physical and biological sciences and leverages expertise in data analytics, machine learning and advanced signal detection technologies. The SETI Institute is a distinguished research partner for industry, academia and government agencies, including NASA and NSF.
News
Related News
Beyond Disclosure Day: The Real-World Protocols
#Press Releases #SETI #Astronomy #Bill Diamond #SETI Institute
SETI Institute Looks for Signs of Technology in Interstellar Visitor 3I/ATLAS
Observations with the Allen Telescope Array set new limits on possible signals from extraterrestrial transmitters. #Press Releases #ATA #3I/ATLAS #Hat Creek Radio Observatory #Radio Astronomy #SETI
SETI Institute Awards $1 Million in STRIDE Grants to Advance Astrobiology, Exoplanet Science, and Public Engagement
#Press Releases #STRIDE #Research #Carl Sagan Center #Spectroscopy #Solar System #SETI #Climate and Bioscience #Astronomy #Astrobiology #Exoplanets #Data Science #Education #Outreach #Hat Creek Radio Observatory #Unistellar #SkyMapper
SETI Institute to Honor Dr. Matthew Tiscareno with 2026 Carl Sagan Center Director’s Award
The Drake Awards event will also recognize SETI Forward and SETI Institute REU student award recipients. #Press Releases #Drake Awards #Frank Drake #SETI #Awards #Planetary Astronomy #Astrobiology #SETI Forward #Education #Carl Sagan Center #Matthew Tiscareno #Nathalie Cabrol #REU
Asteroid Named in Honor of SETI Researcher and Communicator Seth Shostak
#Comets, Meteors, and Asteroids #Seth Shostak #SETI #Astronomy #Big Picture Science #Outreach #Andrew Fraknoi
Narrowing the Search: The 45 Best Targets for Alien Life
#Blog #Astronomy #JWST #NASA Missions and Observatories #Trappist-1 #LaserSETI #ATA #Franck MarchisResearch
Related Projects
SkyMapper: Expanding Access to Real-time Astronomy Through a Global Astronomical Network
SkyMapper and the SETI Institute are connecting educators, students and the public to live astronomical observations through a distributed astronomical network. #SkyMapper #SETI #Citizen Science #Astronomy
Virtual Planetary Laboratory
How can we best assess whether an exoplanet supports life? #VPL
Discovery and Futures Lab
What happens if life beyond Earth is discovered? The Discovery and Futures Lab at the SETI Institute fosters novel and anticipatory research at the intersection of science, society, our planet, and the search for life beyond Earth. #Discovery and Futures LabSupport the
SETI Institute
Scientists are getting closer in their search for life beyond earth. But with limited federal funding for the search for extraterrestrial intelligence, supporters are the reason cutting-edge scientists can keep their eyes on the sky.