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extended r18 vers on poipiku
A lightning bolt that struck a tree on Florida's west coast has produced a fascinating type of phosphorus material we haven't seen on Earth before: one that could represent a whole new mineral group, bridging the gap between space minerals and minerals found on Earth.
The material, which is a close match for calcium phosphite (CaHPO3), was found trapped inside a fulgurite – a "metal glob" formed by the reaction of the ultra-hot lightning bolt with the sand around the roots of its target.
These 'fossilized lightning' fulgurites often occur when lightning strikes certain types of sand, silica, and rock. What's much less common is to find something so unique hidden inside one of these structures.
"We have never seen this material occur naturally on Earth – minerals similar to it can be found in meteorites and space, but we've never seen this exact material anywhere," says geoscientist Matthew Pasek, from the University of South Florida.
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