If being downgraded from planet to dwarf planet back in 2006 was one identity crisis for Pluto, here’s another: Scientists now say the ninth rock from the sun could be a sort of giant comet, having formed when a billion or so comets clumped together in the solar system’s early days.

The researchers hatched their new “cosmochemical” theory — described in a study published May 25 in the journal Icarus — after studying the composition of a vast glacier that forms the left lobe of a prominent heart-shaped feature on Pluto’s surface (see above).

“Using chemistry as a detective’s tool, we are able to trace certain features we see on Pluto today to formation processes from long ago,” Christopher Glein, a senior research scientist at the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio and lead author of the study, said in a written statement. “This leads to a new appreciation of the richness of Pluto’s ‘life story,’ which we are only starting to grasp.”

These maps of Pluto indicate regions rich in methane (CH4), nitrogen (N2), carbon monoxide (CO) and water (H2O) ice. Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory / Southwest Research Institute via NASA

Using data from a pair of unmanned spacecraft that visited the outer solar system in recent years, the scientists determined that the amount of nitrogen in the glacier is just what would be expected if a billion comets similar to one known as 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko coalesced to form a planet roughly 4.5 billion years ago.

The spacecraft that provided the data were the European Space Agency’s Rosetta probe, which orbited Comet 67P between 2014 and 2016, and NASA’s New Horizons spacecraft, which launched in 2006 and conducted a six-month-long flyby of Pluto and its moons in 2015.

Glein acknowledged that the giant comet theory of Pluto's formation is unproven, telling MACH in an email, “We all recognize that more data are needed to put any cosmochemical model for the formation of Pluto on a firmer footing.”

Scott Kenyon, a senior scientist at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Massachusetts, who was not involved with the new study, said the idea that comets — sometimes referred to as "dirty snowballs" — might have come together to form Pluto isn’t particularly surprising. “As I have said in lectures, 'Planets grow like the dust bunnies under your bed' — for the Earth, the dust bunnies are rocky,” he told MACH in an email. “For Pluto, they are icy.”

By studying these icy building blocks, scientists may be able to paint a clearer picture of Pluto’s origin and evolution — which, in turn, may give us a better understanding of how our entire solar system came to be, said Benjamin Bromley, a professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Utah, who was also not involved with the new research.

“This story will contribute to our overall [understanding of] the history of the solar system,” he said, “guiding us to understand how planets emerge around stars throughout the universe.”

Additional reporting by David Freeman.

Want more space stories?

FOLLOW NBC NEWS MACH ON TWITTER, FACEBOOK, AND INSTAGRAM.