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00:00This meteorite has been at Purdue for years but now researchers have published
00:03a new paper about it. They've concluded the meteorite provides evidence when
00:07water was formed on Mars. Star City talked with assistant professor in
00:10Earth Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences Department Marissa Tremblay. We've known
00:15actually for a long time that the meteorite interacted with water when it
00:19was still a rock on Mars before it came to Earth but figuring out when that
00:23interaction with water happened has been really challenging. Tremblay explains
00:27that the meteor was named after Lafayette because it was discovered in a
00:30drawer at Purdue. They originally thought it was actually like a glacially polished
00:34rock but it was sent to the Field Museum where they correctly identified it as a
00:38meteorite. Tremblay talks about the process for dating the minerals in the
00:41paper. It's called argon-argon geochronology and essentially we're
00:45using a mode of radioactive decay where potassium which is common in rock
00:53forming minerals will decay to argon which is a noble gas and is not very
00:57common in rocks and minerals. Senior research scientist Ryan Ichert has been
01:02a part of this project too. He talks about what he's been working on in his
01:05role in the research. The meteorite has been around for a while and many people
01:09have worked on it. There were a number of older data sets that people had used to
01:14to understand the age and history of the meteorite and there were some aspects of
01:19those data sets that were a little bit peculiar. Both Ichert and Tremblay find
01:23this experience to be exciting. There's lots of information from remote sensing,
01:26Martian rovers, from things like that but these are actual physical samples
01:30from another planet that we get to work on and it's so rare and so exciting that
01:34we get to do it. We don't have that many meteorites from Mars so that's pretty
01:36special. This research gives insight to Mars and could totally change what we
01:40think about the planet. Madison Diehl, Star City News, West Lafayette.

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