Tuesday, 12 May 2026

Sibling rivalry in wild Chacma Baboons.

Jealousy occurs in Humans when we perceive our relationship with a person important to us is threatened by the actions of someone else. This is a complex emotion, which often manifests in attempts to disrupt social interactions that we find threatening. Whether jealousy is a uniquely Human emotion is less clear, as it can be hard to judge the genuine emotional state of non-Human Animals, at least in part due to the dangers of anthropomorphising behaviours that resemble Human emotional traits.

Non-Human Primates would appear to be a good starting point for those wishing to study jealousy outside our species, but very few studies appear to have been done in this area, and all of those on sexual jealousy in captive Primates held in unnatural conditions.

In Humans, one area which has been extensively studied is sibling rivalry among children. Human mothers are unusual in that they often care for multiple offspring of different ages at the same time, leading to forms of competition for parental attention and resources which do not occur in most Animals. Intense rivalries can develop between child siblings when they perceive that they are being treated differently, sometimes leading to conflicts which extend into adulthood. Such rivalries are most likely to develop when children are the same sex and close in age.

Such rivalries between siblings of different ages have not been studied in non-Human Animals. Instead, research has concentrated on competition between siblings produced in large clutches or broods, where they are part of a group reliant on parental provisioning until reaching independence. There have also been some studies concerning mother-child competition for resources in monotocous species (species that have one young at a time), plus a few studies looking at species in which older siblings cooperate in the rearing of young. 

Monotocous Animals with long child-rearing periods, including many Primates, form an intermediate group between Humans and polytocous species (species that have produce many offspring in a single clutch or litter). In such species different aged siblings interact with one-another and their parent(s) on a daily basis, and competition between siblings has the potential to have a significant impact upon fitness. Siblings will compete with one another in ways which they do not compete with non-siblings, requiring maternal care and attention rather than just foraging competitively. 

In a paper published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B on 11 February 2026, Axelle Delaunay of the Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier, and the Tsaobis Baboon Project in the Tsaobis Nature Park in Namibia, Vittoria Roatti, also of the Tsaobis Baboon Project, and of the Department of Anthropology at University College London, Rose Ellis and Punaete Kandjii, again of the Tsaobis Baboon Project, Alecia Carter, again of the Tsaobis Baboon Project and the Department of Anthropology at University College London, and of the Gobabeb Research InstituteGuy Cowlishaw of the Tsaobis Baboon Project, the Gobabeb Research Institute, and the Institute of ZoologyMarie Charpentier, also of the Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier, and Élise Huchard, once again of the Institute of Evolutionary Science of Montpellier, the Tsaobis Baboon Project, and the Gobabeb Research Institute, present the results of a study into the role of jealousy in driving sibling competition in wild Chacma Baboons, Papio ursinus, a monotocous, social Primate.

Chacma Baboons live in matrilineal societies in which males disperse to new groups around puberty, while females remain within their birth groups, inheriting their mother's dominance rank. On average, females produce one young every two years, with growing Baboons are weened after about two years, but have a long developmental period and have long-lasting strong bonds to their mother, expressed through grooming relationships in which preference of grooming partner is an important signifier of relationship status.

In order to do this, they looked at instances in which young Baboons interrupted their mother when she was grooming a sibling. They did this to test three hypotheses, that young Baboons interrupted on such occasions because they were jealous, because they wished for attention from their mother themselves, or because they wanted to interact with their sibling. Theoretically, a jealous Baboon would interrupt even if it was not likely to gain any reward, a Baboon wanting attention from its mother would only interrupt if this was likely to result in it getting such attention, and a Baboon wishing to interact with a sibling would only do so if it was likely to gain such interaction. 

Theoretically, a Baboon which was jealous or wanted to play with a sibling would be more likely to approach its mother when she was grooming that sibling, while a Baboon simply wanting its mothers attention would be most likely to approach her when she was unoccupied. Furthermore, the jealousy hypothesis suggests that a Baboon would be more likely to interrupt its mother if she was grooming a sibling which tended to monopolise her attention, or otherwise appeared to be a favourite. This would fit with the patterns observed in Human children. 

It was also predicted that, in Baboons, jealousy would be more prevalent among same-sex siblings, and in particular between sisters, since younger sisters can come to outrank older sisters with maternal support. Since males leave the troop at puberty and do not rely on their mothers for social status, they were predicted to be less prone to jealousy. 

Furthermore, it was predicted that Baboons seeking maternal care would be more likely to interrupt when their mother was grooming a younger sibling, as these tend to be easier to displace, and that females may be more inclined to interrupt when their mother was grooming a male sibling, as mother-daughter social bonds are stronger than mother-son bonds.

If Baboons interrupt grooming because they want to play with a sibling, then males interrupting when other males were being groomed would be predicted to be the more frequent occurrence, as young males play with other young males more frequently than females play with females, or young Baboons play with members of the opposite sex. This would also lead to more interruptions when the Baboon being groomed was close in age to the Baboon interrupting. 

Dalauney et al. studied Chacma Baboons from two well habituated troops (L and J) in the Tsaobis Nature Park, which lies on the edge of the Namib Desert in Namibia, between August and December 2021. The Baboons were followed from dawn to dusk each day by trained observers who were able to identify all Baboons in the troops, including infants. Every family group which included at least a mother and two offspring was included in the study. This comprised eight families in each troop, with between two and five offspring, with a total of 28 female and 21 male young Baboons, ranging in age from six days to 8.9 years. This included adult females, but not adult and subadult males still living in the maternal group, due to the limited amount of interaction these males have with their mothers. 

Female Baboons were observed for five minute intervals when they were either grooming one of their offspring, or resting, and all interruptions were recorded, as well as whether this was be a sibling or non-sibling of the Baboon being groomed. Interruptions could be aggressive, such as attacking, chasing, biting, pushing, slaping, threatening, displacing, or supplanting; affiliative behaviours such as body contact, come-here faces, grunting, jumping on one groomer, lipsmacking, playing, presenting, or touching; tantrum behaviours such as gecks, complaint grunts, or other screams; maternal care solicitations, such as soliciting access to the nipple, soliciting grooming, suckling, or starting a triadic grooming session with the groomers; or simply approaching within a metre of a grooming pair. Under this analysis, a very broad range of behaviours were treated as 'interruptions', the object being to understand the motives of young Baboons in approaching their mothers. As such, focusing only on agonistic behaviours or effective disruption would only provide a partial picture of sibling interference, and might not pick up on some relationships, for example if younger siblings were afraid to behave aggressively towards older siblings being groomed by their mothers, but still found other ways to gain her attention. 

Having come up with a definition of 'interruptions', Dalauney et al. then looked at the outcome of these interruptions, grouping them into three basic categories; instances where the grooming continues, instances where the grooming stops, and instances in which the interrupter replaces one of the Baboons in the grooming relationship. In the final case, they recorded which Baboons were in the new grooming relationship (i.e. mother and interrupting youngster, or interrupting youngster and previously involved youngster). Finally, Dalauney et al. recorded every youngster within 10 m of their mother at the start of a five minute session. If the mother broke off from her original activity (grooming or resting) to engage in some other activity during the five minutes of the observation, that observation was abandoned. Each family group was monitored for no more than five minutes each hour. 

A juvenile male just approached and initiated body contact with his younger sister being groomed by their mother. This interference did not interrupt the ongoing grooming interaction, nor allow him to groom with his mother or his sibling. Axelle Delaunay in Dalauney et al. (2026).

Dalauney et al. found that young Baboons were significantly more likely to interrupt their mother when she was grooming a sibling than when she was resting, which predicted by the theories that the young Baboon was jealous or wanted the attention of its sibling, but not by the theory that the primary motivator was gaining the attention of the mother. This was unaffected by the presence of other siblings within 10 m (which was predicted to make interruptions less likely if a young Baboon was looking for a sibling to play with), nor was it affected by the sex of the youngsters, nor the social status of those involved. Baboons did become less likely to interrupt their mother grooming a sibling as they got older.

Younger Baboons were more likely to interrupt their mother when she was grooming a sibling, but this was apparently unaffected by the age-difference between them and the sibling being groomed. However, older siblings were twice as likely to interrupt their mother when she was grooming a younger sibling, and all Baboons were more likely to interrupt their mother when she was grooming a sibling of the same sex, with males more likely to interrupt when a brother was being groomed than females were to interrupt when a sister was being groomed. If one of the mother's offspring was perceived as a favourite, and received more grooming attention than its siblings, then those siblings were more likely to interrupt when it was being groomed. The age of this favourite did not appear to matter. This again supports the theory that interrupting Baboons were driven primarily by jealousy. 

Of 501 instances of Baboons interrupting their mother while she was grooming a sibling, 95 instances (19%) resulted in grooming being broken off (the predicted desired outcome of the jealousy model), while in 44 cases (9%) resulted in the interrupter entering into a grooming session with the mother (the predicted desired outcome of the maternal attention-seeking model), and only 12 (2%) resulted in the interrupter entering into a grooming session with the sibling (the predicted desired outcome of the sibling attention-seeking model). Entering into a grooming relationship with the mother or a sibling did not necessarily disrupt the original grooming relationship, as Baboons can form grooming triads. Data was not initially collected on interrupters entering into play relationships with the sibling being groomed (another possible outcome of the sibling attention-seeking model), but only 11 instances of this were observed, limiting support for this hypothesis. Thus, while most attempts at interrupting a mother grooming a sibling failed to disrupt that activity, they were significantly more likely to cause that grooming session to break off than to allow the interrupting Baboon to enter into a grooming relationship with one of the originally involved Baboons, supporting the hypothesis that the main reason for such interruptions was jealousy.

Interference are rarely successful, but more often disrupt the ongoing grooming than they grant access to maternal or sibling grooming. Proportion of successful interference as defined under the jealousy hypothesis (i.e. the interference effectively disrupts the ongoing mother–sibling grooming, in pink), the care-seeking hypothesis (i.e. the interferer gains access to maternal grooming, in orange), and the sibling-seeking hypothesis (i.e. the interferer gains access to sibling grooming, in yellow). Note that interferer do not need to disrupt the ongoing grooming to gain access to maternal or sibling grooming, as interference leading to triadic grooming interactions was also considered successful. The blue bar represents all the interferences that were not successful under any hypothesis, i.e. when the grooming kept going and the interferer did not get access to either of the groomers. Dalauney et al. (2026).

Dalauney et al.'s study lends to support to the idea that young Baboons interrupt their mothers when they are grooming siblings out of jealousy. They were more likely to interrupt their mothers when they were grooming siblings than when she was apparently available. They were also more likely to interrupt when the sibling being groomed was younger than them, of the same sex, or perceived as their mothers favourite. This interference appeared to be largely aimed at the mothers rather than their siblings. In Baboon societies, mothers are a more useful social connection than siblings, as they provide support to female offspring throughout their lives, and to male offspring for as long as they remain within their maternal group, whereas brothers will leave the group at some point, and sisters will shift the focus of their support to their own offspring when they start to have them.

Younger siblings were preferentially targeted over older siblings. This may be because younger Baboons tend to monopolise their mothers attention, or because they are less likely to respond aggressively to such interruptions. There is a lack of comparative studies of this behaviour in Humans, where only the jealousy of older siblings towards younger siblings has been explored, and then only in the context of age difference between siblings in modern Western societies.

What has been recorded in both modern Western societies and non-Human Primates is that behaviour predicted to be caused by jealousy is more commonly directed at younger siblings, and siblings of the same sex (which implies that in both cases offspring of different sexes are competing for slightly different maternal resources, and that siblings of the same sex are therefore a greater threat). In Baboons and Humans, young males engage in more rough-and-tumble play than young females, which might lead to a desire to play with siblings becoming a reason to disrupt interactions between those siblings and their mothers. Dalauney et al. believe that by looking at a wide range of interrupting actions and their outcomes, that their study has screened for this possibility

Dalauney et al. believe that the tendency of Baboons to interrupt when their mothers are grooming a sibling perceived as a favourite is important. This matches the finding in Humans that children who feel disfavoured by their parents report higher levels of conflict with both parents and siblings, often with lifelong consequences. In Humans, siblings are less likely to be jealous if they perceive that siblings receiving different treatment are doing so because they have different needs. Non-Human Primates are known to be able to track relationships between their close family and social partners, as well as those between third parties. Dalauney et al.'s findings suggest that Chacma Baboons are able to judge the strength of their maternal bond compared to that of their siblings, although the cognitive ability needed to do this and the perception of fairness in Baboons will need to be the subject of further studies. Negative responses to uneven food rewards have previously been recorded in several Primate species, as well as Domestic Dogs and Corvids. Whether Primates can assess maternal care in the same way is still unclear, but the ability to do so would clearly have implications for family dynamics.

One of the most important questions that arises from Dalauney et al.'s study is whether there is any benefit to a young Baboon in simply disrupting its mother grooming a sibling, and whether there is any more general advantage to jealousy. Interrupting activity was shown to be twice as likely to result in the mother abandoning grooming of a sibling as it was to result in the interrupter entering into a grooming session with the mother, and entering into such a grooming bout does not actually require the mother to abandon the other youngster, as Baboons can form grooming triads. Notably, the most common outcome was that nothing changed, i.e. the mother continued to groom the sibling she had been grooming when interrupted. This suggests that any benefits associated with jealousy may be complex and time-delayed, particularly if young Baboons are able to manage their emotional state sufficiently to refrain from an activity unlikely to pay off. Any adaptive benefits of jealous behaviour are likely to change over a lifetime, which should also alter their expression. There is less advantage to a Baboon monopolising its mothers time and attention as it becomes older and more independent, able to find its own resources and make its own social connections. Under these circumstances, sibling connections might become more important than maternal connections. In strictly evolutionary terms (i.e. the passing on of genes), it may be advantageous to an older juvenile Baboon to stifle jealous instincts in order to let a younger sibling have more time with its mother.

Ultimately, whether we are Human or Baboon, our emotions are a private matter, confined within our heads, which others can only judge by our actions. It is therefore possible that, when judging the emotions of another species, that we anthropomorphise their motivations, and provide emotional explanations for actions which have been determined by entirely different biological pathways. However, there is a growing body of evidence coming from a wide range of taxa, including Primates, Ungulates, and Corvids, that individuals will try to interfere with a close partners interactions with others, apparently in order to protect a valuable social relationship. Most studies have not attempted to evaluate the emotional underpinning of such actions, but these responses clearly correspond to what we would call jealousy in Humans. Dalauney et al. suggest that the role of emotions in managing social relationships in non-Human Animals has been underestimated, despite the fact that the primary function of emotions is to provide a way for individuals to act upon external stimuli. Jealousy is a social emotion, something which helps us to navigate complex social environments, and comparisons of Human and non-Human responses to similar social stimuli can potentially unlock ways to understand the emotional lives of Animals. 

See also...

Wednesday, 6 May 2026

Two English 'Lamb of God' coins discovered in Denmark.

Two 'Lamb of God' coins issued by the English King Æthelred the Unready around the year 1009 AD have been discovered in Denmark, according to a press release issued by the National Museum of Denmark on 29 April 2026. The coins were both uncovered by metal detectorists, one in the north of Jutland and one in the south.

An English 'Lamb of God' coin discovered by a metal detectorist in northern Jutland. Søren Greve/National Museum of Denmark.

The Lamb of God coins were a special edition coin produced by Æthelred the Unready as part of an attempt to obtain divine protection for his kingdom, along with a series of religious ceremonies, fasts, and penances. Unlike regular Saxon coins, which typically had the king's head on one side and a cross on the other, they had a 'Lamb of God' sign on one side, which comprised a Lamb pierced by a cross, a symbol for Jesus, and a Dove on the other, a symbol of the Holy Spirit.

An English 'Lamb of God' coin discovered by a metal detectorist in southern Jutland. Søren Greve/National Museum of Denmark.

The crisis which provoked these measures was the invasion of England by Viking raiders, mostly from Denmark. However, this was did not prove to be an effective method of defence, with southern England being ravaged by the armies of Thorkell the Tall between 1009 and 1013, and Sweyn Forkbeard launching a full-scale invasion in 1013 which forced Æthelred into exile. Sweyn Forkbeard died in 1014, allowing Æthelred to briefly regain his thrown, though he lost it again in 1016 to Sweyn's son, Cnut.

While the coins failed to save Æthelred's reign, they were apparently very popular with the invading Vikings. Of the 30 known examples, only 4-5 have been found in England, with the remainder discovered in Scandinavian and Baltic countries, the majority with piercings which suggest the Vikings wore them as pendants.

Having conquered England in 1016, Cnut succeeded to the throne of Denmark in 2018, following the death of his brother Harald II. In 1026 Olaf Haraldsson, King of Norway, mounted an invasion of Denmark while Cnut was in England, starting a series of wars which led to Olaf's death in 1030, and Cnut installing his wife, Ælfgifu of Northampton, as regent of Norway. 

Having unified England, Denmark, and Norway into a single state (referred to as the North Sea Empire by modern historians), Cnut set about consolidating and unifying his empire. This included the introduction of silver coinage on the English model to Denmark and Scandinavia. Prior to this, coins had not been directly used as legal tender in this area, silver measured by weight used as the standard medium of exchange. However, the innovation appears to have been quickly adopted, with coins accepted as an easier way to do business.

See also...

Tuesday, 5 May 2026

Meteorite hunters may have found the largest known chunk of the Bronze Age Kaali Meteorite.

Two Polish meteorite hunters, Filip Nikodem and Andrzej Owczarzak, have recovered what they believe to be a fragment of the Kaali Meteorite, a large body which impacted the Estonian island of Saaremaa about 3500 years ago. The piece is reported to weigh about 40 kg, with a second fragment weighing 15 kg also found. The largest potential fragment of the meteorite discovered to date weighed 5.7 kg, and was found by Filip Nikodem in the spring of 2024.

A 40 kg potential fragment of the Kaali Meteorite found in Estonia by two Polish Meteorite Hunters. Z głową w gwiazdach/Facebook.

The Kaali Impact Structures are a series of nine circular crater lakes on the island of Saaremaa, the largest of which has a diameter of 110 m and a depth of 22 m. These are thought to have been caused by an object with a mass of between 20 and 80 tonnes entering the atmosphere at a velocity of somewhere between 10 and 20 km per second, and exploding in a fireball between 10 and 5 km above the ground. This explosion is thought to have largely vaporised the bolide, as well as removing about 81 000 m³ of rock on the ground, and incinerating vegetation up to 6 km from the impact site.  

The lake in the main Kaali Meteorite Crater on Saaremaa Island. The crater is about 110 m across, but the lake only occupies the central part of it. Wikimedia Commons.

This is thought to have happened about 3500 years ago, when the island was occupied by a Bronze Age population, although attempts to date the site and meteorite fragments from it have produced dates of between 5600 and 400 BC. A Bronze Age arrowhead made from meteoric iron which was found in Switzerland in the 1870s has been linked to the Kaali meteorites on the basis of its metallurgy, making a date of around 1500 BC more plausible.

(a) Overview of the Mörigen arrowhead (A/7396). Note adhering bright sediment material. Remnants of an older label on the left of the sample number. Total length is 39.3 mm. ( b) Side view of the Mörigen arrowhead. Layered texture is well visible. Point is to the right. Thomas Schüpbach in Hofmann et al. (2023).

Prior to 2023, the largest fragment of meteorite found at the Kaali sites weighed 6.21 g. However, in the autumn of that year Filip Nikodem obtained a search permit for the area, and, using a metal detector, found a series of pieces of iron which he believed to be meteoric in origin. These were handed to the Estonian National Heritage Board, who sent them to the University of Tartu, where a rapid X-ray fluorescence analysis found that the iron pieces contained between 0.6% and 4.8% nickel, as well as traces of titanium and vanadium, which is typical of meteoric iron.

The four pieces of meteoric iron handed to the Estonian National Heritage Board  by Filip Nikodem in 2023. Kristo Oks/University of Tartu.

In the spring of 2024, Filip Kikodem returned to the Kaali Lakes, collecting several more fragments with a total mass of 10.5 kg, the largest of which weighed 5.7 kg, making it (at that time) potentially the largest chunk of the Kaali bolide ever discovered. However, despite requests from the Estonian National Heritage Board, these pieces have never been surrendered to them. Instead, the Estonian authorities believe that the pieces were taken to Poland, where they are being analysed at a Polish university. Furthermore, the National Heritage Board received a letter from a lawyer in Poland, asserting Nikodem's ownership rights over the meteorite fragments.

A 5.7 kg possible meteorite fragment found by Filip Nikodem at Kaali Lakes in the spring of 2024. Filip Nikodem.

In the autumn of 2024 Filip Nikodem returned to Kaali Lakes, this time accompanied by meteorite hunter Andrzej Owczarzak, who did not posses a permit to search in Estonia, and was therefore in breach of Estonian heritage laws. At this time concerns were raised by the Estonian newspaper Saarte Hääl, which observed that the original search permit had been given to Filip Nikodem in relation to a two week project run by the University of Tartu in 2017, in which metal detectorists were given a short training course by the university then allowed to collect fragments for a display at a visitor centre, with the collectors being allowed to keep some fragments as a reward.

Saarte Hääl also noted that suspiciously large chunks of 'Kaali Meteorite' had begun to be offered for sale in Poland, and that some Polish enthusiasts had raised concerns that these might be fragments of the more common Morasko Meteorite, which fell near Potsdam about 5000 years ago. The newspaper also noted that Estonian law provides no specific protection for meteorites found in the country, although there are some restrictions upon where a metal detector can be used. 

Following the announcement of these discoveries, Jüri Plado of the University of Tartu applied for funding for a study on the feasibility of changing the law to protect meteorites found in Estonia, reasoning that such large objects would be a significant piece of national heritage and ought to be studied at an institute within the country, but this application was rejected. 

Local farmers talked to by Saarte Hääl stated that the Poles had shown them permits and promised to take any material found to the University of Tartu. However, several expressed doubts that the iron found was in fact meteoric, as it came from shallow depths on farmland, likely to have been disturbed since the Bronze Age, and resembled bog iron (impure iron deposits which precipitate out of solution in boggy soils). The newspaper contacted Kristo Oks of the Estonian National Heritage Board, who confirmed that it would be impossible to tell the difference between bog iron and meteorites without laboratory analysis. 

See also...

Monday, 4 May 2026

The Bahamas ends mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

The Bahamas has been recognised as having eliminated the mother-to-child transmission of HIV, according to a press release issued by the World Health Organization on 22 April 2026. The has been achieved through the establishment of a comprehensive universal healthcare system, and the implementation of an Elimination of Mother-To-Child Transmission program, which aims to eliminate the mother-to-child transmission of three diseases, HIV, Syphilis, Hepatitis B. Under the terms of this program, all expectant mothers are offered screening for these diseases, as well as treatments to prevent transmission to the child. The program has also included making available pre-exposure prophylaxis treatments for HIV, which prevent people becoming infected following an initial exposure, reducing the prevalence of HIV in the population. The Bahamas becomes the twelfth country in the Americas Region to have eliminated mother-to-child transmission of HIV.

The national flag of the Bahamas. St Kitts & Nevis Observer.

Human Immunodeficiency Virus, or HIV, is a form of Lentivirus which causes infections in Humans, spread through sexual intercourse or exchange of blood. Notably, the Virus infects the cells of the Human immune system, where it is hard for that immune system to attack, and eventually leads to a breakdown of the immune system known as AIDS (Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome), during which the body becomes vulnerable to a wide range of infections, including many by micro-organisms which are not usually pathogenic. 

Untreated, HIV invariably leads to AIDS, and AIDS is invariably fatal, but, as with Syphilis, HIV infections can go through long phases of dormancy, leaving infected people unaware that they have the disease. Neither an effective vaccine nor a cure for HIV has yet been developed, however, it is possible to suppress the infection with a combination of anti-viral drugs, allowing patients to lead relatively normal lives, as long as their supply of antivirals is not interrupted. Children born to mothers with HIV are not automatically infected, as the Virus is usually unable to cross the placenta, but there is a high chance of infection during birth if the mother is not receiving treatment.

Scanning electron microscope image of an HIV virion. Hockley et al. (1988)

See also...




The Eta Aquariid Meteor Shower.

The Eta Aquariid Meteor Shower will peak before dawn on Wednesday 6 May 2026, with up to 45 meteors per hour at it's peak, radiating from the constellation of Aquarius. The radiant point of this shower does not spend long above the horizon in the Northern Hemisphere at this time of year, but is often a good display in the Southern Hemisphere between midnight and dawn. The Eta Aquarids are potentially visible between 19 April and 28 May, but are extremely hard to spot away from the peak of activity. With the last Quarter Moon in Sagittarius, pre-dawn viewing may suffer from some light interference. 

The radiant point (point from which the meteors appear to radiate) of the Eta Aquariid Meteors. Universe Today.

Meteor showers are thought to be largely composed of material from the tails of comets. Comets are composed largely of ice (mostly water and carbon dioxide), and when they fall into the inner Solar System the outer layers of this boil away, forming a visible tail (which always points away from the Sun, not in the direction the comet is coming from, as our Earth-bound experience would lead us to expect). Particles of rock and dust from within the comet are freed by this melting (strictly sublimation) of the comet into the tail and continue to orbit in the same path as the comet, falling behind over time.

The Earth passing through a stream of comet dust, resulting in a meteor shower. Not to scale. Astro Bob.

The Eta Aquarid Meteor  Shower is caused by the Earth passing through the trail of Halley's Comet, where it encounters thousands of tiny dust particles shed from the comet as its icy surface is melted (strictly sublimated) by the heat of the Sun. Halley's Comet only visits the inner Solar System every 75 years (most recently in 1986 and next in 2061), but the trail of particles shed by it forms a constant flow, which the Earth crosses twice each year; in May when it causes the Eta Aquarid Meteor Shower and in October when it causes the Orionid Meteor Shower.

Halley's Comet imaged on 8 March 1986 from Easter Island. William Liller/International Halley Watch Large Scale Phenomena Network/NASA/Wikimedia Commons.

Halley's Comet has been observed repeatedly and recognised as the same recurring object since at least 240 BC. However, it takes its modern name from the eighteenth century English Astronomer Edmund Halley, who determined the comet's periodicity in 1705.

Halley's Comet completes one orbit every 75.32 years (27 509 days) on an eccentric, orbit tilted at 162° to the plane of the Solar System (i.e. a retrograde orbit, at an angle of18° to the plane of the Solar System, but travelling in the opposite direction to the majority of the objects in the Solar System), that takes it from 0.56 AU from the Sun (59% of the average distance at which the Earth orbits the Sun, and inside the orbit of the planet Venus) to 35.1 AU from the Sun (35.1 times as far from the Sun as the Earth, and outside the orbit of the planet Neptune). As a comet with a period of more than 20 years but less than 200 years, Halley's Comet is considered to be a Periodic Comet, and a Halley-type Commet.

The orbit of Halley's Comet. Nagual Design/Wikimedia Commons.

Halley's Comet was visited by the European Space Agency's Giotto Probe in and Russian Vega 1 and Vega 2 probes March 1986, which were able to determine that the nucleus of the comet was only 15 km across, although it was surrounded by a coma about 100 000 km in diameter, made up of fragments of dust and ice released from the surface as it was heated by the Sun, causing the ices on its surface to sublimate (turn directly from solids to gasses), and that this material comprised 80% water, 10% carbon monoxide, 2.5% methane and ammonia, as well as trace amounts of more complex hydrocarbons, iron and sodium.

Halley's Comet imaged by the Giotto Probe on 14 March 1986. European Space Agency/Wikimedia Commons.

See also...