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They think a fragile meteorite broke up as it entered the atmosphere,
producing a fireball with temperatures over 1,800C that turned the desert
sand and rock into molten lava which became glass when it cooled.
Experts have puzzled over the origin of the yellow-green glass — carved into
the shape of a scarab beetle — since it was excavated in 1922 from the tomb
of the teenage king, who died about 1323BC. It is generally agreed that it
came from an area called the Great Sand Sea but there has been uncertainty
over how it was formed because there is no crater to back up the idea of a
meteorite strike.
Now it is thought that the meteorite responsible was not intact but made up of
loose rubble.
“A fireball moving quicker than a hurricane force would have meant a blast of
air so hot it could melt all the sand and sandstone on the ground,” said
Mark Boslough, an expert on impact physics based at the Sandia National
Laboratories in New Mexico.
He recreated the effect on his computer and found that an object about 390ft
in diameter and travelling at 12.4 miles a second would indeed produce
enough heat to melt sand and create glass without leaving a crater as it
broke up in the atmosphere.
The theory forms the basis of a BBC2 television programme, King Tut’s
Fireball, to be shown next month.
“It would have become a molten lake of bubbling liquid sand and as the sand
cooled it would have formed glass which ended up in King Tutankhamun’s
jewellery,” said Boslough.
The necklace holding the 1in oval glass piece is housed in the Egyptian Museum
in Cairo. It was one of hundreds of items discovered by the British
archeologist Howard Carter in a tomb in the Valley of the Kings in Luxor.
In his diary Carter described the brightly coloured gem as “greenish yellow
chalcedony”. However, in 1999 Italian geologists tested the chemical
composition of the scarab and concluded it was not chalcedony but natural
desert glass, which is found only in the Great Sand Sea 500 miles southwest
of Cairo.
Many meteorite craters can be seen only from space, so satellite photography
experts examined the area. Farouk El-Baz, director of the centre for remote
sensing at Boston University said: “If this glass is of meteoric origin then
there should be a crater of that age. But we did not find a smoking gun for
silica (glass) there.”
Chunks of glass were discovered in 1932 by Patrick Clayton, a British surveyor
operating in the desert with the Egyptian Geological Survey. “He ran into
this funny area with this glistening stuff all over the place,” said his son
Peter this weekend.
Next year an exhibition will be held in London showing for the first time many
of the pieces found by Carter.
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