Close Menu
Ztoog
    What's Hot
    Gadgets

    Apple declares last MacBook Pro with an optical drive obsolete

    Crypto

    $100,000 Bitcoin Still In Sight, This Analyst Says, But With A Caveat

    Science

    Harnessing Technology to Safeguard Biodiversity

    Important Pages:
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Ztoog
    • Home
    • The Future

      Can work-life balance tracking improve well-being?

      Any wall can be turned into a camera to see around corners

      JD Vance and President Trump’s Sons Hype Bitcoin at Las Vegas Conference

      AI may already be shrinking entry-level jobs in tech, new research suggests

      Today’s NYT Strands Hints, Answer and Help for May 26 #449

    • Technology

      Elon Musk tries to stick to spaceships

      A Replit employee details a critical security flaw in web apps created using AI-powered app builder Lovable that exposes API keys and personal info of app users (Reed Albergotti/Semafor)

      Gemini in Google Drive can now help you skip watching that painfully long Zoom meeting

      Apple iPhone exports from China to the US fall 76% as India output surges

      Today’s NYT Wordle Hints, Answer and Help for May 26, #1437

    • Gadgets

      Future-proof your career by mastering AI skills for just $20

      8 Best Vegan Meal Delivery Services and Kits (2025), Tested and Reviewed

      Google Home is getting deeper Gemini integration and a new widget

      Google Announces AI Ultra Subscription Plan With Premium Features

      Google shows off Android XR-based glasses, announces Warby Parker team-up

    • Mobile

      Deals: the Galaxy S25 series comes with a free tablet, Google Pixels heavily discounted

      Microsoft is done being subtle – this new tool screams “upgrade now”

      Wallpaper Wednesday: Android wallpapers 2025-05-28

      Google can make smart glasses accessible with Warby Parker, Gentle Monster deals

      vivo T4 Ultra specs leak

    • Science

      June skygazing: A strawberry moon, the summer solstice… and Asteroid Day!

      Analysts Say Trump Trade Wars Would Harm the Entire US Energy Sector, From Oil to Solar

      Do we have free will? Quantum experiments may soon reveal the answer

      Was Planet Nine exiled from the solar system as a baby?

      How farmers can help rescue water-loving birds

    • AI

      Fueling seamless AI at scale

      Rationale engineering generates a compact new tool for gene therapy | Ztoog

      The AI Hype Index: College students are hooked on ChatGPT

      Learning how to predict rare kinds of failures | Ztoog

      Anthropic’s new hybrid AI model can work on tasks autonomously for hours at a time

    • Crypto

      Bitcoin Maxi Isn’t Buying Hype Around New Crypto Holding Firms

      GameStop bought $500 million of bitcoin

      CoinW Teams Up with Superteam Europe to Conclude Solana Hackathon and Accelerate Web3 Innovation in Europe

      Ethereum Net Flows Turn Negative As Bulls Push For $3,500

      Bitcoin’s Power Compared To Nuclear Reactor By Brazilian Business Leader

    Ztoog
    Home » A giant meteorite has been lost in the desert since 1916—here’s how we might find it
    Science

    A giant meteorite has been lost in the desert since 1916—here’s how we might find it

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    A giant meteorite has been lost in the desert since 1916—here’s how we might find it
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    Enlarge / Chinguetti slice at the National Museum of Natural History. A bigger meteorite reported in 1916 hasn’t been noticed since.

    In 1916, a French consular official reported discovering a giant “iron hill” deep in the Sahara desert, roughly 45 kilometers (28 miles) from Chinguetti, Mauritania—purportedly a meteorite (technically a mesosiderite) some 40 meters (130 toes) tall and 100 meters (330 toes) lengthy. He introduced again a small fragment, however the meteorite hasn’t been discovered once more since, regardless of the efforts of a number of expeditions, calling its very existence into query.

    Three British researchers have carried out their very own evaluation and proposed a way of figuring out as soon as and for all whether or not the Chinguetti meteorite actually exists, detailing their findings in a brand new preprint posted to the physics arXiv. They contend that they’ve narrowed down the seemingly areas the place the meteorite might be buried beneath excessive sand dunes and are at present awaiting entry to information from a magnetometer survey of the area in hopes of both discovering the mysterious lacking meteorite or confirming that it seemingly by no means existed.

    Captain Gaston Ripert was in cost of the Chinguetti camel corps. One day he overheard a dialog amongst the chameliers (camel drivers) about an uncommon iron hill in the desert. He satisfied a neighborhood chief to information him there one night time, taking Ripert on a 10-hour camel journey alongside a “disorienting” route, making just a few detours alongside the approach. He could even have been actually blindfolded, relying on how one interprets the French phrase en aveugle, which might imply both “blind” (i.e. with out a compass) or “blindfolded.” The 4-kilogram fragment Ripert collected was later analyzed by famous geologist Alfred Lacroix, who thought of it a big discovery. But when others did not find the bigger Chinguetti meteorite, folks began to doubt Ripert’s story.

    Advertisement

    “I do know that the normal opinion is that the stone doesn’t exist; that to some, I’m purely and easily an imposter who picked up a metallic specimen,” Ripert wrote to French naturalist Theodore Monod in 1934. “That to others, I’m a simpleton who mistook a sandstone outcrop for an unlimited meteorite. I shall do nothing to disabuse them, I do know solely what I noticed.”

    Encouraged by a separate report of native blacksmiths claiming to get better iron from a giant block someplace east or southeast of Chinguetti, Monod intermittently looked for the meteorite a number of instances over the ensuing a long time, to no avail. A pilot named Jacques Gallouédec thought he noticed a darkish silhouette in the Saharan dunes in the Eighties. But neither Monod nor a second expedition in the late Nineties—documented by the UK’s Channel 4—may find something. Monod concluded in 1989 that Ripert had seemingly mistakenly recognized a sedimentary rock “with no hint of steel” as a meteorite.

    Still, as Rutgers University physicist Matt Buckley famous on Bluesky, “This story has every part: giant unexplained meteorites, sand dunes, a man named Gaston, ductile nickel needles, secret aeromagnetic surveys, and camel drivers.” So naturally, it intrigued Stephen Warren of Imperial College London, Oxford University’s Ekaterini Protopapa, and Robert Warren, who started their very own seek for the mysterious lacking meteorite in 2020.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Science

    June skygazing: A strawberry moon, the summer solstice… and Asteroid Day!

    Science

    Analysts Say Trump Trade Wars Would Harm the Entire US Energy Sector, From Oil to Solar

    Science

    Do we have free will? Quantum experiments may soon reveal the answer

    Science

    Was Planet Nine exiled from the solar system as a baby?

    Science

    How farmers can help rescue water-loving birds

    Science

    A trip to the farm where loofahs grow on vines

    Science

    AI Is Eating Data Center Power Demand—and It’s Only Getting Worse

    Science

    Liquid physics: Inside the lab making black hole analogues on Earth

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Posts
    Technology

    X’s new calling feature hurts your privacy — here’s how to switch it off

    In his quest to flip a easy and functioning Twitter app into X, the every…

    AI

    AI for Social Good – Ztoog

    Posted by Jimmy Tobin and Katrin Tomanek, Software Engineers, Google Research, AI for Social Good…

    The Future

    India-Pak conflict: Pak appoints ISI chief, appointment comes in backdrop of the Pahalgam attack

    Pakistan has appointed Director General of Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), Lieutenant General Muhammad Asim Malik, the…

    Crypto

    ETH Remains Steady At Over $2,300

    Recent patterns point out that the impetus fueling Ethereum’s climb is much from diminishing, and…

    Science

    Smart Textiles Enable Shape-Shifting Garments

    Invisibility cloaks are regularly spotlighted in science fiction, showcasing futuristic know-how. While related developments in…

    Our Picks
    Gadgets

    This premium AI flight deal service is $49.99 for Presidents Day

    Crypto

    Ethereum Developers Resolve Beacon Chain Finality Issues Ethereum Developers Resolve Beacon Chain Finality Issues

    The Future

    iPhone 16 teardown shows off a new way to attach a phone battery

    Categories
    • AI (1,494)
    • Crypto (1,754)
    • Gadgets (1,805)
    • Mobile (1,851)
    • Science (1,867)
    • Technology (1,803)
    • The Future (1,649)
    Most Popular
    The Future

    Starlink Mini Dish Release Appears to Be Imminent as New Images Surface

    Gadgets

    Microsoft strips ads from Skype in a move toward “user-centric design”

    AI

    Effector: A Python-based Machine Learning Library Dedicated to Regional Feature Effects

    Ztoog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2025 Ztoog.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.