<p><P>Imagine the unique experience of being the very first person to hold a newly-found meteorite in your hand β a rock from space, older than Earth!</P><P></P><P>"Weekend meteorite hunting" with magnets and metal detectors is becoming ever more popular as a pastime, but of course you canβt just wa
Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites
β Scribed by O. Richard Norton, Lawrence A. Chitwood (auth.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag London
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 282
- Series
- Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Imagine the unique experience of being the very first person to hold a newly-found meteorite in your hand β a rock from space, older than Earth!
"Weekend meteorite hunting" with magnets and metal detectors is becoming ever more popular as a pastime, but of course you canβt just walk around and pick up meteorites in the same way that you can pick up seashells on the beach. Those fragments that survived the intense heat of re-entry tend to disguise themselves as natural rocks over time, and it takes a trained eye β along with the information in this book β to recognize them.
Just as amateur astronomers are familiar with the telescopes and accessories needed to study a celestial object, amateur meteoriticists have to use equipment ranging from simple hand lenses to microscopes to study a specimen, to identify its type and origins.
Equipment and techniques are covered in detail here of course, along with a complete and fully illustrated guide to what you might find and where you might find it. In fact, the Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites contains pretty much everything an amateur astronomer β or geologist β needs to know about meteors and meteorites.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-xvii
Interplanetary Dust and Meteors....Pages 5-22
Meteorites: Fragments of Asteroids....Pages 23-41
Meteoroids to Meteorites: Lessons in Survival....Pages 43-71
The Chondrites....Pages 75-111
Primitive and Differentiated Meteorites: Asteroidal Achondrites....Pages 113-133
Differentiated Meteorites: Planetary and Lunar Achondrites....Pages 135-148
Differentiated Meteorites: The Irons....Pages 149-165
Differentiated Meteorites: Stony-Irons....Pages 167-173
A Gallery of Meteorwrongs....Pages 175-180
In the Field....Pages 183-199
From Hand Lens to Microscope....Pages 201-237
Back Matter....Pages 239-287
β¦ Subjects
Astronomy, Observations and Techniques; Popular Science in Astronomy; Planetology
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<p><P>Imagine the unique experience of being the very first person to hold a newly-found meteorite in your hand β a rock from space, older than Earth!</P><P></P><P>"Weekend meteorite hunting" with magnets and metal detectors is becoming ever more popular as a pastime, but of course you canβt just wa
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