This article is republished from Eos, read the original article.
Micrometeorites, unlike their larger brethren, rarely get a spotlight at museums. But there's plenty to learn from these extraterrestrial particles, despite the largest of them measuring just millimeters across.
Nearly 50 tons of extraterrestrial material fall on Earth every day, and the majority of that cosmic detritus is minuscule. Micrometeorites are, by definition, smaller than 2 millimeters in diameter, and they’re ubiquitous, said Fabian Zahnow, an isotope geochemist at Ruhr-Universität Bochum in Germany. "You can basically find them everywhere."
Researchers recently analyzed fossilized micrometeorites that fell to Earth millions of years ago. They extracted whiffs of atmospheric oxygen incorporated into the particle