SMOD Update
"A 466-million-year-old space collision is
still raining shrapnel on Earth":
[T]he debris from that 466-million-year-old breakup continued to fall.
And fall. And fall. Even now, they make up the largest group of
meteorites that land on Earth.
“That collision cascade” — the
series of smaller smashes and crashes that followed the initial breakup —
“had consequences that are still felt today,” said Philipp Heck, a
cosmochemist at the University of Chicago and curator of meteorites for
the Field Museum.