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Home » ‘Fireball’ meteorite that smashed into New Jersey home contains ingredients of life from ancient proto-planet
‘Fireball’ meteorite that smashed into New Jersey home contains ingredients of life from ancient proto-planet
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‘Fireball’ meteorite that smashed into New Jersey home contains ingredients of life from ancient proto-planet

News RoomBy News RoomJuly 18, 20260 ViewsNo Comments

Scientists have discovered the building blocks of life inside a meteorite that smashed through a New Jersey home two years ago. The space rock contains amino acids, carbon compounds and other “prebiotic” molecules similar to what may have helped kick-start life on our planet, a new study shows.

Scientists on the study team — led by Peter Jenniskens, a meteor astronomer with affiliations at the SETI Institute and NASA’s Ames Research Center — praised the homeowner in Hillsborough, N.J., for quickly preserving the meteorite after it fell through the roof on July 16, 2024, despite the adverse circumstances. His actions included using disposable gloves and aluminum foil to place pieces of the meteorite fragments into glass jars.

“I was at home at the time, heard a loud crash and found a hole in the ceiling of the master bedroom,” the homeowner, who was not named, said in a statement from the SETI Institute. “I smelled a strong, sulfur-like odor and saw many black fragments, along with debris and black dust that covered my bed, carpet and surrounding areas.”

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A close up of a gray rock with jagged edges.

A close-up of the Hillsborough meteorite’s surface.

(Image credit: SETI Institute)

Those meteorite pieces were precious, the scientists said, and likely came from an ancient solar system planet that wasn’t fully formed. “A forensic study of the fragments revealed that they contained preserved bits from near the surface of a small primitive asteroid where it experienced concentrated salty fluids — a process not previously known from this type of protoplanet world,” Jenniskens said in the statement.

The study, published July 15 in the journal Science Advances, also traced how the meteorite got to the house. Earlier on July 16, 2024, at least 60 observers in New York, New Jersey and other Northeastern states spotted a meteor later confirmed to be traveling at 32,000 mph (51,500 km/h). At least 16 people in New York and New Jersey reported feeling the meteor’s shock wave.


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The rock broke apart in midair, with observer reports stopping when the meteor reached 22 miles (35 kilometers) in altitude, although Newark Liberty International Airport briefly tracked pebbles falling from the sky with Doppler weather radar after that. Fragments from only one meteorite ‪—‬ called Hillsborough, after the town where it crashed through the New Jersey home ‪—‬ were recovered.

The American Meteor Society used its cameras in Northford, Connecticut, and Douglassville, Pennsylvania — along with a doorbell camera in Wayne, New Jersey — to figure out the meteor’s origin, Mike Hankey, an operations manager at the American Meteor Society and co-author of the study, said in the statement. “The path traced back to low in the asteroid belt.”

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Hillsborough is the second stony meteorite of its type ever spotted in a fall. Later analysis showed that the meteorite is full of ancient brines or salt. Scientists classified the meteorite as a type of stony space rock called a carbonaceous chondrite.

Scientists will compare the salt minerals to samples of asteroids Ryugu and Bennu, both of which contain ingredients of life and are samples of another carbonaceous chondrite type that formed earlier than Hillsborough. This analysis could help scientists further trace the origins of life-friendly chemistry in the early solar system.

Jenniskens, P., Zolensky, M. E., Gordon, A., Gordon, J., Hankey, M., Silber, E. A., Giannone, M. R., Han, J., Le, L., Fries, M. D., Ziegler, K., Chan, Q. H. S., Behera, D., Watson, J. S., Sephton, M. A., Brakeley, J., Munday, B., Kebukawa, Y., Gainsforth, Z., . . . Ebel, D. S. (2026). Meteor over New York City: Brines in a primitive CM asteroid. Science Advances, 12(29), eaea2105. https://doi.org/10.1126/sciadv.aea2105

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