Jun. 13th, 2009
Geological Processes
Jun. 13th, 2009 02:56 pmSomeone recently asked me why, in one of my stories, I had an alien species which has the habit of sneaking onto inhabited worlds and stealing mineral resources. They wanted to know why they didn't just process asteroids.
The answer is in two words: differentiation and metamorphosis.
Only the largest asteroids - such as Ceres - are large enough for a significant amount of gravitational differentiation. That is, denser materials settling to the core.
Metamorphosis is the chemical alteration of minerals through geologic processes. Remember how excited scientists were over the discovery of olivine by one of the Mars rovers? Olivine requires water to form. Which means Mars at some time had significant amounts of water. You're not likely to have much water on an asteroid.
Differentiation also takes place on a smaller scale. Materials which don't combine with the rock around them tend to form nodules and veins. Hence gold and silver mines. Aliens with advanced sensor and excavation technology could find and efficiently remove such concentrated minerals.
So, yeah. It could happen, especially if the operation was planned as a short-term, high-return project, rather than a long mission.
The answer is in two words: differentiation and metamorphosis.
Only the largest asteroids - such as Ceres - are large enough for a significant amount of gravitational differentiation. That is, denser materials settling to the core.
Metamorphosis is the chemical alteration of minerals through geologic processes. Remember how excited scientists were over the discovery of olivine by one of the Mars rovers? Olivine requires water to form. Which means Mars at some time had significant amounts of water. You're not likely to have much water on an asteroid.
Differentiation also takes place on a smaller scale. Materials which don't combine with the rock around them tend to form nodules and veins. Hence gold and silver mines. Aliens with advanced sensor and excavation technology could find and efficiently remove such concentrated minerals.
So, yeah. It could happen, especially if the operation was planned as a short-term, high-return project, rather than a long mission.