Close Menu
  • Breaking News
  • Business
  • Career
  • Sports
  • Climate
  • Science
    • Tech
  • Culture
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok
Categories
  • Breaking News (5,256)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,462)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,432)
  • Education (4,652)
  • Finance (213)
  • Health (866)
  • Lifestyle (4,315)
  • Science (4,340)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Hand Picked

Arizona astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captures skydiver silhouetted against sun

November 17, 2025

US flights to return to normal after aviation authority lifts restrictions | Aviation News

November 17, 2025

Travis Barker reveals his only ‘vice’ amid healthy lifestyle

November 17, 2025

The Continuing Saga of Anti-Tails and Tails around 3I/ATLAS | by Avi Loeb | Nov, 2025

November 17, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
onlyfacts24
  • Breaking News

    US flights to return to normal after aviation authority lifts restrictions | Aviation News

    November 17, 2025

    Japan travel stocks sink as China-Japan spat deepens

    November 17, 2025

    Sophie Grégoire reacts to ex Justin Trudeau’s romance with Katy Perry

    November 17, 2025

    Toppled Hasina’s son warns Bangladesh court will sentence her to death | Sheikh Hasina News

    November 16, 2025

    Why big private investors aren’t worried

    November 16, 2025
  • Business

    Addressing Gender-Based Violence: 16 Days of Activism

    November 16, 2025

    Global Weekly Economic Update | Deloitte Insights

    November 15, 2025

    CBSE Class 12 Business Studies Exam Pattern 2026 with Marking Scheme and Topic-wise Marks Distribution

    November 13, 2025

    25 Tested Best Business Ideas for College Students in 2026

    November 10, 2025

    Top 10 most-read business insights

    November 10, 2025
  • Career

    City of Statesville Career Opportunities (November 15)

    November 17, 2025

    Brenya Reid Hits 1,000 Career Kills Against Baylor

    November 17, 2025

    Knicks’ Landry Shamet credits MSG crowd for career-best performance

    November 17, 2025

    Stephen A. Smith Announces Career News on Friday

    November 16, 2025

    Adam Mohammed rushes for career-high 3 touchdowns, Washington trounces Purdue 49-13

    November 16, 2025
  • Sports

    Thunder’s Nikola Topic diagnosed with testicular cancer, undergoing chemotherapy

    November 15, 2025

    Nikola Topic, Oklahoma City Thunder, PG – Fantasy Basketball News, Stats

    November 14, 2025

    Sports industry in Saudi Arabia – statistics & facts

    November 14, 2025

    OKC Thunder Guard Nikola Topic Diagnosed with Testicular Cancer

    November 12, 2025

    Nikola Topic: Oklahoma City Thunder guard, 20, diagnosed with cancer

    November 11, 2025
  • Climate

    Organic Agriculture | Economic Research Service

    November 14, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    November 9, 2025

    NAVAIR Open Topic for Logistics in a Contested Environment”

    November 5, 2025

    Climate-Resilient Irrigation

    October 31, 2025

    PA Environment & Energy Articles & NewsClips By Topic

    October 26, 2025
  • Science
    1. Tech
    2. View All

    Three Trending Tech Topics at the Conexxus Annual Conference

    November 15, 2025

    Another BRICKSTORM: Stealthy Backdoor Enabling Espionage into Tech and Legal Sectors

    November 14, 2025

    Data center energy usage topic of Nov. 25 Tech Council luncheon in Madison » Urban Milwaukee

    November 11, 2025

    Google to add ‘What People Suggest’ in when users will search these topics

    November 1, 2025

    Arizona astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captures skydiver silhouetted against sun

    November 17, 2025

    The Continuing Saga of Anti-Tails and Tails around 3I/ATLAS | by Avi Loeb | Nov, 2025

    November 17, 2025

    YouTube · VideoFromSpaceBlastoffs! SpaceX launches Starlink satellites twice in less than 4 hoursA SpaceX Falcon 9 launched 29 Starlinks from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Nov. 14, 2025 at 10:08 p.m. EST. About 4 hours later,….1 day ago

    November 17, 2025

    The Moon Was Hiding Something And China Just Dug It Up

    November 17, 2025
  • Culture

    KLTV.comKLTV Saturday East Texas News at 10PM Recurring – clipped version CADDO CULTURE DAY CELEBRATIONKLTV Saturday East Texas News at 10PM Recurring – clipped version CADDO CULTURE DAY CELEBRATION. Updated: Nov. 14, 2025 at 8:24 AM PST..2 days ago

    November 17, 2025

    Academy nudges voters to actually watch all the Oscar contenders this year

    November 17, 2025

    Krishnaswami Brings a Taste of Culture to the Cultural District

    November 16, 2025

    Community and caffeine: coffee culture on campus

    November 16, 2025

    Gen Z hits record low smoking rates, but social media threatens progress

    November 16, 2025
  • Health

    Health, Economic Growth and Jobs

    November 16, 2025

    Editor’s Note: The Hot Topic Of Women’s Health

    November 14, 2025

    WHO sets new global standard for child-friendly cancer drugs, paving way for industry innovation

    November 10, 2025

    Hot Topic, Color Health streamline access to cancer screening

    November 6, 2025

    Health insurance coverage updates the topic of Penn State Extension webinar

    November 5, 2025
  • Lifestyle
Contact
onlyfacts24
Home»Science»The Bennu asteroid reveals clues to how the building blocks of life on Earth may have been seeded
Science

The Bennu asteroid reveals clues to how the building blocks of life on Earth may have been seeded

February 2, 2025No Comments
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Bennu 1024x973.png
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A bright fireball streaked across the sky above mountains, glaciers and spruce forest near the town of Revelstoke in British Columbia, Canada, on the evening of March 31, 1965. Fragments of this meteorite, discovered by beaver trappers, fell over a lake. A layer of ice saved them from the depths and allowed scientists a peek into the birth of the solar system.

Nearly 60 years later, NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission returned from space with a sample of an asteroid named Bennu, similar to the one that rained rocks over Revelstoke. Our research team has published a chemical analysis of those samples, providing insight into how some of the ingredients for life may have first arrived on Earth.

WATCH: NASA scientists unveil first near-Earth asteroid sample returned to U.S.

Born in the years bracketing the Revelstoke meteorite’s fall, the two of us have spent our careers in the meteorite collections of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and the Natural History Museum in London. We’ve dreamed of studying samples from a Revelstoke-like asteroid collected by a spacecraft.

Then, nearly two decades ago, we began turning those dreams into reality. We joined NASA’s OSIRIS-REx mission team, which aimed to send a spacecraft to collect and return an asteroid sample to Earth. After those samples arrived on Sept. 24, 2023, we got to dive into a tale of rock, ice and water that hints at how life could have formed on Earth.

file-20250126-15-wwkzxt

In this illustration, NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft collects a sample from the asteroid Bennu. Image via
NASA/Goddard/University of Arizona.

The CI chondrites and asteroid Bennu

To learn about an asteroid – a rocky or metallic object in orbit around the Sun – we started with a study of meteorites.

Asteroids like Bennu are rocky or metallic objects in orbit around the Sun. Meteorites are the pieces of asteroids and other natural extraterrestrial objects that survive the fiery plunge to the Earth’s surface.

We really wanted to study an asteroid similar to a set of meteorites called chondrites, whose components formed in a cloud of gas and dust at the dawn of the solar system billions of years ago.

The Revelstoke meteorite is in a group called CI chondrites. Laboratory-measured compositions of CI chondrites are essentially identical, minus hydrogen and helium, to the composition of elements carried by convection from the interior of the Sun and measured in the outermost layer of the Sun. Since their components formed billions of years ago, they’re like chemically unchanged time capsules for the early solar system.

READ MORE: What a NASA mission to study a metallic asteroid may teach us about Earth’s core

So, geologists use the chemical compositions of CI chondrites as the ultimate reference standard for geochemistry. They can compare the compositions of everything from other chondrites to Earth rocks. Any differences from the CI chondrite composition would have happened through the same processes that formed asteroids and planets.

CI chondrites are rich in clay and formed when ice melted in an ancient asteroid, altering the rock. They are also rich in prebiotic organic molecules. Some of these types of molecules are the building blocks for life.

This combination of rock, water and organics is one reason OSIRIS-REx chose to sample the organic-rich asteroid Bennu, where water and organic compounds essential to the origin of life could be found.

Evaporites − the legacy of an ancient brine

Ever since the Bennu samples returned to Earth on Sept. 24, 2023, we and our colleagues on four continents have spent hundreds of hours studying them.

The instruments on the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft made observations of reflected light that revealed the most abundant minerals and organics when it was near asteroid Bennu. Our analyses in the laboratory found that the compositions of these samples lined up with those observations.

The samples are mostly water-rich clay, with sulfide, carbonate and iron oxide minerals. These are the same minerals found in CI chondrites like Revelstoke. The discovery of rare minerals within the Bennu samples, however, surprised both of us. Despite our decades of experience studying meteorites, we have never seen many of these minerals.

We found minerals dominated by sodium, including carbonates, sulfates, chlorides and fluorides, as well as potassium chloride and magnesium phosphate. These minerals don’t form just when water and rock react. They form when water evaporates.

FILE PHOTO: The return capsule containing a sample collected from the asteroid Bennu by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft

The return capsule containing a sample collected from the asteroid Bennu in October 2020 by NASA’s OSIRIS-REx spacecraft is seen shortly after touching down in the desert at the Department of Defense’s Utah Test and Training Range in Dugway, Utah, U.S. September 24, 2023. Photo by NASA/Keegan Barber via Reuters.

We’ve never seen most of these sodium-rich minerals in meteorites, but they’re sometimes found in dried-up lake beds on Earth, like Searles Lake in California.

Bennu’s rocks formed 4.5 billion years ago on a larger parent asteroid. That asteroid was wet and muddy. Under the surface, pockets of water perhaps only a few feet across were evaporating, leaving the evaporite minerals we found in the sample. That same evaporation process also formed the ancient lake beds we’ve seen these minerals in on Earth.

WATCH: NASA releases first images from OSIRIS-REx touchdown on asteroid

Bennu’s parent asteroid likely broke apart 1 to 2 billion years ago, and some of the fragments came together to form the rubble pile we know as Bennu.

These minerals are also found on icy bodies in the outer solar system. Bright deposits on the dwarf planet Ceres, the largest body in the asteroid belt, contain sodium carbonate. The Cassini mission measured the same mineral in plumes on Saturn’s moon Enceladus.

We also learned that these minerals, formed when water evaporates, disappear when exposed to water once again – even with the tiny amount of water found in air. After studying some of the Bennu samples and their minerals, researchers stored the samples in air. That’s what we do with meteorites.

Unfortunately, we lost these minerals as moisture in the air on Earth caused them to dissolve. But that explains why we can’t find these minerals in meteorites that have been on Earth for decades to centuries.

Fortunately, most of the samples have been stored and transported in nitrogen, protected from traces of water in the air.

Until scientists were able to conduct a controlled sample return with a spacecraft and carefully curate and store the samples in nitrogen, we had never seen this set of minerals in a meteorite.

An unexpected discovery

Before returning the samples, the OSIRIS-REx spacecraft spent over two years making observations around Bennu. From that two years of work, researchers learned that the surface of the asteroid is covered in rocky boulders.

We could see that the asteroid is rich in carbon and water-bearing clays, and we saw veins of white carbonate a few feet long deposited by ancient liquid water. But what we couldn’t see from these observations were the rarer minerals.

READ MORE: NASA Dart spacecraft rams into an asteroid in defense test

We used an array of techniques to go through the returned sample one tiny grain at a time. These included CT scanning, electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction, each of which allowed us to look at the rock at a scale not possible on the asteroid.

Cooking up the ingredients for life

From the salts we identified, we could infer the composition of the briny water from which they formed and see how it changed over time, becoming more sodium-rich.

This briny water would have been an ideal place for new chemical reactions to take place and for organic molecules to form.

While our team characterized salts, our organic chemist colleagues were busy identifying the carbon-based molecules present in Bennu. They found unexpectedly high levels of ammonia, an essential building block of the amino acids that form proteins in living matter. They also found all five of the nucleobases that make up part of DNA and RNA.

Based on these results, we’d venture to guess that these briny pods of fluid would have been the perfect environments for increasingly complicated organic molecules to form, such as the kinds that make up life on Earth.

READ MORE: Out-of-this-world space missions to watch in 2025

When asteroids like Bennu hit the young Earth, they could have provided a complete package of complex molecules and the ingredients essential to life, such as water, phosphate and ammonia. Together, these components could have seeded Earth’s initially barren landscape to produce a habitable world.

Without this early bombardment, perhaps when the pieces of the Revelstoke meteorite landed several billion years later, these fragments from outer space would not have arrived into a landscape punctuated with glaciers and trees.

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Arizona astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captures skydiver silhouetted against sun

November 17, 2025

The Continuing Saga of Anti-Tails and Tails around 3I/ATLAS | by Avi Loeb | Nov, 2025

November 17, 2025

YouTube · VideoFromSpaceBlastoffs! SpaceX launches Starlink satellites twice in less than 4 hoursA SpaceX Falcon 9 launched 29 Starlinks from Cape Canaveral Space Force Station on Nov. 14, 2025 at 10:08 p.m. EST. About 4 hours later,….1 day ago

November 17, 2025

The Moon Was Hiding Something And China Just Dug It Up

November 17, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Latest Posts

Arizona astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captures skydiver silhouetted against sun

November 17, 2025

US flights to return to normal after aviation authority lifts restrictions | Aviation News

November 17, 2025

Travis Barker reveals his only ‘vice’ amid healthy lifestyle

November 17, 2025

The Continuing Saga of Anti-Tails and Tails around 3I/ATLAS | by Avi Loeb | Nov, 2025

November 17, 2025
News
  • Breaking News (5,256)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,462)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,432)
  • Education (4,652)
  • Finance (213)
  • Health (866)
  • Lifestyle (4,315)
  • Science (4,340)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from onlyfacts24.

Follow Us
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • TikTok

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest news from ONlyfacts24.

News
  • Breaking News (5,256)
  • Business (319)
  • Career (4,462)
  • Climate (217)
  • Culture (4,432)
  • Education (4,652)
  • Finance (213)
  • Health (866)
  • Lifestyle (4,315)
  • Science (4,340)
  • Sports (342)
  • Tech (178)
  • Uncategorized (1)
Facebook Instagram TikTok
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and services
© 2025 Designed by onlyfacts24

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