Chapter 1167 - Discussion About The Crater (1/2)

Chapter 1167: Discussion About The Crater

Translator: Nyoi-Bo Studio <i class="_hr">Editor: Nyoi-Bo Studio

Wilkes Land had a huge crater just below it Of course, Li Du didn’t know that He did

not learn raphy of the area

Elson went to prepare dinner, and Steve sat thean to talk about the

purpose of his visit to Antarctica

As he said earlier, he was looking for amany photos

of meteorites, and he took some and placed them on the table for Li Du to look at

The Wilkes crater was discovered half a century ago and was located just beneath the

ice of Wilkes Field It was a crater created froe that y measured it to be 243 kilometers in

diameter and up to 848 meters deep

In addition to the crater, there could be a mass tumor at Wilkes Field

A mass tumor, as its name implies, was a tumor of extraordinary mass, which existed in

the interior of the earth It consisted ofgeological formations

Mass tumors have been found on the moon and on Mars, and are the result of asteroid

i to NASA

A mass tumor previously discovered on earth was found in Hawaii, but scientists

believed it was caused by a volcanic eruption, not an asteroid iravity and cli satellite find Wilkes’ er than the crater and spanned about 300 kiloe volcanoes in that part of Antarctica, which ruled out the possibility

that the tumor was formed by volcanic eruptions Therefore, there was only one

possible cause of mass tumor formation

It was the result of an asteroid collision!

“Based on aeroacoustics, there are gravity anomalies in the lower end and e nulass meteorites, which are now

widely dispersed across the Australian continent These inated from this

one,” Steve explained to him

“What does that mean?” asked Li Du

Steve said, “It means a lot First of all, it means there are a lot offor the to become a meteorite hunter?”

Like the art hunters he met in Miami, meteorite hunters were much the same:

professionals who looked forbeen a rarity, rarer than gold and diamonds,

and there were only 300 pieces so far in the whole world

Rare things were expensive, and eneral collections did not have

scientific research value, sohas become i the age of the earth and its evolution through h scientific value

Most of this collection as not carried out by private people but directly funded by

the governovernh

Li Du took notice of the meteorite market when he learned about the world luxury

ular customers and were considered a very special

rarity

In 1993, a lunar rams was sold in Sotheby's for 442,500