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News / Life / Science & Technology

Scientists hunt for meteor that splashed down off Washington coast

By Sandi Doughton, The Seattle Times
Published: June 30, 2018, 9:59pm

Brittany Bryson was sitting at a fast-food drive-up in Ocean Shores the evening of March 7 when a bright flash lit the sky, followed by a boom so loud it rattled her car. Minutes later she fielded a frantic call from her sister, who had been outside with Bryson’s kids. “They thought it was a spaceship,” she recalled.

In a way, it was.

Scientists confirmed that the celestial fireworks visible on the coast from British Columbia to northern Oregon were caused by a meteor slamming into the Earth’s atmosphere. Now, researchers think they may be able to retrieve some of the shattered bits from the seafloor off the Washington coast.

If they succeed, it would be a first, said Marc Fries, NASA’s curator of cosmic dust and also a dogged meteorite hunter who helped orchestrate the fishing expedition set for Monday.

“Nobody has ever done this before,” he said.

Fries is optimistic, partly because the space rock that exploded in a fireball and sonic boom — a phenomenon called a bolide — was huge.

“This is easily the biggest recorded meteor fall in the United States in 21 years,” Fries said. He estimates the hurtling rock was about the size of a golf cart.

He used weather radar to locate the splashdown zone about 16 miles offshore from the Quinault Indian Nation village of Taholah. Because meteors enter the atmosphere at a downward angle, they are easy to distinguish from weather systems that move horizontally, he explained.

Based on the radar signals, Fries calculated about 2 tons of rock survived the fiery plunge and scattered across a patch of seafloor about a half-mile wide. Some of the fragments are as big as a brick.

Fries has helped organize about two dozen successful meteorite scavenger hunts across the country, but all of them were on land. A sea hunt is only possible because a nonprofit research ship, the Nautilus, is serendipitously in the midst of a survey mission off the Northwest coast.

“The meteor just happened to fall in the exact spot for all of this to work,” Fries said.

The 211-foot vessel is operated by the Ocean Exploration Trust (OET), founded by explorer Robert Ballard, who located the wreck of the Titanic. The crew agreed to devote a day — and their sophisticated scanners and underwater robots — to the hunt.

“It’s a great opportunity for us because it’s such an interesting, pure exploration type mission,” Nicole Raineault, OET’s vice president of exploration and science, said by phone Friday from the ship as it prepared to dock in Astoria, Ore.

The meteorites fell near the head of an underwater canyon in an area where the water is about 400 feet deep and the seafloor is relatively flat, said Jenny Waddell, research coordinator for the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary. That means there’s a good chance the black rocks will stand out against the light substrate — making the search less of a needle-in-a-haystack proposition.

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