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Earth's largest lunar meteorite announced.


Earth's largest lunar meteorite A Lunar meteorite is a meteorite that is known to have originated on the Moon. Discovery
The first lunar meteorite, Yamato 791197, was discovered in 1979 in Antarctica, but its lunar origin was not discovered for several years.
 announced

A meteorite meteorite, meteor that survives the intense heat of atmospheric friction and reaches the earth's surface. Because of the destructive effects of this friction, only the very largest meteors become meteorites.  found seven months ago in Antarctica now appears to rank as the largest piece of the moon yet recovered on Earth. Weighing 663 grams, just under a pound and a half, it and a related sample raise to eight the number of lunar rocks identified among the thousands of meteorites Meteorites
See also astronomy.

aerolithology

the science of aerolites, whether meteoric stones or meteorites. Also called aerolitics.

astrolithology

the study of meteorites. Also called meteoritics.
 collected and cataloged on Earth.

Before 1982, scientists did not even know whether meteorite impacts could actually knock rock fragments free of the moon's gravity and send them to Earth. However, a tiny chunk weighing little more than an ounce and found in Antarctica late in the previous year by a U.S. team reminded some researchers of samples brought back from the moon by the Apollo astronauts This is a list of all astronauts directly associated with NASA's Apollo program. A total of thirty-eight astronauts flew in an Apollo spacecraft, twenty-nine of whom were part of the Apollo program, the rest being Skylab and Apollo-Soyuz astronauts. . When various scientists analyzed bits of that meteorite, they agreed nearly unanimously that it indeed had come from the moon. Since then, Japanese researchers, who also go meteorite-hunting at the bottom of the world, have identified five more Antarctic rocks as coming from the moon.

Confirming the existence of lunar meteorites This is a list of lunar meteorites. That is, meteorites that have been identified as having originated on the Moon.

Meteorite Found Mass (g) Notes
Yamato 791197 1979 52 feldspathic regolith breccia
Yamato 793169 1979 6 mare basalt
 proved of particular interest, in part because some researchers suspect that certain other meteorites found on Earth come from Mars. As yet, no one has confirmed a Martian origin for any of these rocks, and the likelihood of meteorites reaching Earth from Mars remains speculative (see story, p.53).

Scientists with a U.S. team located the latest lunar addition (designated MAC88105) along with about 1,000 other meteorites on an icy expanse of Antarctica's MacAlpine Hills. Among them, says Marilyn M. Lindstrom of NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston, was a smaller fragment (MAC88104) weighing just over 2 ounces, which is probably a broken-off chip of the record-setting rock. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Brian Mason of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., the evidence that the two finds came from the moon includes their iron-manganese ratio, high aluminum oxide aluminum oxide: see alumina.  percentage, low amounts of sodium and potassium, and the composition of the glassy matrix that holds the smaller fragments together.

Each chunk is a form of rock called a breccia breccia: see conglomerate.
breccia

Coarse sedimentary rock consisting of angular or nearly angular fragments larger than 0.08 in. (2 mm). Breccia commonly results from processes such as landslides or geologic faulting, in which rocks are fractured.
, consisting of small particles of various rocks and minerals crushed and recombined by impacts on the lunar surface. Most of their outer surfaces are dark gray and pitted, as though bits had been removed by temperature changes and other effects of weathering. A thin gray-green "fusion crust," probably formed by the heat of the meteorites' descent through Earth's atmosphere, covers about 30 percent of their surfaces.
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Copyright 1989, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Space Sciences
Publication:Science News
Date:Jul 22, 1989
Words:411
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