In another study, which was published last year in the journal PNAS, researchers suggest that diamonds in stony meteorites called ureilites form by rapid shock transformation from graphite, such as when minor planets collide together or with large asteroids.
Ureilites are fragments of a larger celestial body smashed to pieces through violent collisions with other celestial bodies. They often contain large quantities of carbon in the form of graphite and nanodiamonds, among other things.
Past studies suggested that diamonds in ureilites formed like those on Earth – deep in the mantle, under high continuous pressure. If diamonds in ureilites formed this way, then the original parent body on which they formed must have been a large protoplanet that was at least the size of Mars or Mercury.
But the researchers found no evidence requiring high static pressures and long growth time in a planet's deep interior. They studied diamonds from three ureilite samples and found lonsdaleite layers in the nanodiamonds, which only form under sudden, very high pressure. Moreover, the silicate minerals in the samples also displayed typical signs of shock pressure.
The researchers refuted the large parent body hypothesis and concluded that diamonds in ureilite form from original graphite via shock processes. Learn more about cool scientific processes at Discoveries.news. Sources include: LiveScience.com Advances.ScienceMag.org Phys.orgTurmeric from Bangladesh sometimes contains lead-laced chemical compounds, study finds
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