Meteorites of northeastern New Mexico

Vermejo Park Pub Date : 1900-01-01 DOI:10.56577/ffc-27.293
D. E. Lange, K. Keil
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Abstract

Meteorites are naturally occurring, solid objects which reach the earth from space. Man has known about meteorites for millennia, and classical Chinese and ancient Greek and Latin literature have recorded the fall of stones from the sky. The oldest fall from which material is definitely known is the Ensisheim meteorite which fell on the 16th of November in 1492 near Ensisheim, Alsace, France. Until the early 1800's scientists remained skeptical about stones that fell from the sky. Then on April 26, 1803, a fireball was observed over France and a shower of several thousand stones fell near L'Aigle. Biot (1803) described this fall and established that meteorites do indeed fall from the sky. Brown (1961) has estimated that about 500 meteorites arrive on the earth each year of which about five are recovered (about one fall per year is recovered in the U.S.). Meteorites are named after their place of fall or find (closest village or well-known landmark). Meteorites vary in size, with the smallest weighing 0.0003 gm (Sikhote Alin, USSR) and the largest weighing about 60 metric tons (Hoba, Southwest Africa). Meteorites frequently break apart during entry into the earth's atmosphere, producing meteorite showers. The largest known meteorite shower in terms of the number of specimens occurred near Pultusk, Poland, in 1868, from which about 100,000 stones were recovered. Meteorites are divided into four broad classes: achondrites, chondrites, stony-irons and irons. Chondrites are the most abundant meteorites, making up 86% of the known meteorite falls, and stony-irons and irons the least abundant with 1.3 and 3.7%, respectively (Table 1). The irons and stony-irons, how-ever, make up over 50% of the finds, because they are easier to recognize and are more resistant to terrestrial weathering. The achondrites (Figs. 1, 2) are generally divided into eight
新墨西哥州东北部的陨石
陨石是自然形成的固体物体,从太空到达地球。几千年前,人类就已经知道了陨石,中国古典文学、古希腊和拉丁文学都记录了石头从天上掉下来的情况。已知最古老的坠落物是1492年11月16日坠落在法国阿尔萨斯的恩西海姆附近的恩西海姆陨石。直到19世纪初,科学家们仍然对从天而降的石头持怀疑态度。然后在1803年4月26日,一个火球在法国上空被观测到,几千块石头在拉伊格尔附近落下。Biot(1803)描述了这次坠落,并确定陨石确实从天上掉下来。Brown(1961)估计,每年大约有500颗陨石落在地球上,其中大约有5颗被回收(美国每年大约回收1颗)。陨石以它们坠落或发现的地点(最近的村庄或著名的地标)命名。陨石大小不一,最小的重0.0003克(Sikhote Alin,苏联),最大的重约60公吨(Hoba,西南非洲)。陨石在进入地球大气层时经常分裂,产生陨石阵雨。就标本数量而言,已知最大的陨石雨发生在1868年波兰普尔图斯克附近,从中发现了大约10万块石头。陨石分为四大类:无球粒陨石、球粒陨石、石铁陨石和铁陨石。球粒陨石是最丰富的陨石,占已知陨落的86%,石铁和铁最少,分别为1.3%和3.7%(表1)。而铁和石铁则占发现的50%以上,因为它们更容易识别,更耐陆地风化。无球粒(图1、2)一般分为8个
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