This is a glossary of terms used in meteoritics, the science of meteorites.
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- 2 Pallas – an asteroid from the asteroid belt and one of the likely parent bodies of the CR meteorites.
 - 4 Vesta – second-largest asteroid in the asteroid belt and likely source of the HED meteorites.
 - 221 Eos – an asteroid from the asteroid belt and one of the likely parent bodies of the CO meteorites.
 - 289 Nenetta – an asteroid from the asteroid belt and one of the likely parent bodies of the angrites.
 - 3103 Eger – an asteroid from the asteroid belt and one of the likely parent bodies of the aubrites.
 - 3819 Robinson – an asteroid from the asteroid belt and one of the likely parent bodies of the angrites.
 - IA meteorite – an iron meteorite group now part of the IAB group/complex.
 - IAB meteorite – an iron meteorite and primitive achondrite of the IAB group/complex.
 - IB meteorite – an iron meteorite group now part of the IAB group/complex.
 - IC meteorite – an iron meteorite that is part of the IC group.
 
A
- Ablation – the process of a meteorite losing mass during the passage through the atmosphere.
 - Acapulcoite – a group of primitive achondrites.
 - Accretion – the process in which matter of the protoplanetary disk coalesces to form planetesimals.
 - Achondrite – a differentiated meteorite (meaning without chondrules).
 - Aerolite – an old term for stony meteorites.
 - ALH – an abbreviation used for meteorites from Allan Hills.
 - Allan Hills 84001 – is an exotic meteorite from Mars that does not fit into any of the SNC groups and was thought to contain evidence for life on Mars.
 - Allende meteorite – is the largest carbonaceous chondrite ever found on Earth.
 - Amphoterite – an obsolete classification of chondritic meteorites that are now classified as LL.
 - Angrite – a basaltic meteorite.
 - ANSMET – the Antarctic Search for Meteorites is a scientific program that looks for meteorites in the Transantarctic Mountains.
 - Asteroidal achondrite – an achondrite that differentiated on an asteroid or planetesimal (see planetary achondrite)
 - Asteroid spectral types – classification of asteroids according to their spectra.
 - Ataxite – an iron meteorite that has no visible structures when etched.
 - Aubrite – a class of achondrite meteorites composed primarily of the orthopyroxene enstatite
 
B
- Basaltic achondrite – a grouping of basalt meteorites (HED meteorites + Angrite)
 - Brachinite – either a primitive achondrite or an asteroidal achondrite
 - Bolide – is an extremely bright meteor, especially one that explodes in the atmosphere
 
C
- C – can refer to carbonaceous chondrite or to an iron meteorite designation (Roman numeral and letter).
 - Carbonaceous chondrite
 - CAI – an abbreviation of calcium–aluminium-rich inclusion
 - Calcium–aluminium-rich inclusion
 - Chassignite
 - Chondrite – stony meteorites unmodified by melting or differentiation of the parent body
 - Chondrule – millimetre-scale round grains found in chondrites
 - Clan – meteorites that are not similar enough to form a group, but are also not too different from each other to be put in separate classes.[1]
 - Class – two or more groups that have a similar chemistry and oxygen isotope ratios.[1]
 - Compositional type – a classification based on overall composition, for example stony, iron, stony-iron (as introduced by Maskelyne). Can also refer to the composition deduced from spectroscopy of asteroids.
 - Condensation – the process of chemicals changing from the gaseous to the solid phase during the cooling of the protoplanetary disk.
 - Condensation sequence – the sequence of minerals that changes from the gaseous to the solid state while the protoplanetary disk cools.
 - Cosmic dust – small interplanetary and interstellar particles that are similar to meteorites (See Micrometeorite).
 - Cosmochemistry – the study of the chemical composition of the universe and its constituents, and the processes that produced those compositions.[2]
 
D
- Dar al Gani – a meteorite field in the Libyan Sahara.
 - Desert glass – natural glass found in deserts formed from the silica in sand as a result of lightning strikes or meteor impacts.
 - Differentiated – a meteorite that has undergone igneous differentiation. (See: achondrite)
 - Differentiation – usually the process of a planetesimal forming an iron core and silicate mantle.
 - Duo – a grouping of two meteorites that share similar characteristics (see Grouplet).
 
E
- E – can refer to enstatite chondrite or to an iron meteorite designation (Roman numeral and letter).
 - Eagle Station grouplet – a set of pallasite meteorite specimen that do not fit into any of the defined pallasite groups.
 - Electrophonic bolide – a meteoroid which produces a measurable discharge of electromagnetic energy (EMP) during its passage through the atmosphere.
 - Enstatite achondrite – a meteorite that is mostly composed of enstatite. Usually part of the aubrite group.
 - Enstatite chondrite – a rare form of meteorite thought to comprise only 2% of chondrites.
 
F
- Fall – a meteorite that was seen while it fell to Earth and found.
 - Find – a meteorite that was found without seeing it fall.
 - Fossil meteorite – a meteorite that was buried under layers of sediment before the start of the Quaternary period. Some or all of the original cosmic material has been replaced by diagenetic minerals.[3]: 320 (It is, however, not a fossil).
 - Fusion crust – a coating on meteorites that forms during their passage through the atmosphere.
 
G
H
- Hammer Stone – a specific individual meteorite that has hit either a human, man-made object, and/or an animal.
 - HED – abbreviation for three basaltic achondrite groups howardite, eucrite and diogenite.
 - HED meteorite – a clan of basaltic achondrites.
 - Hexahedrite – a structural class of iron meteorites having a relatively low nickel content
 - Hunter – a person who searches for meteorites.
 
I
- Impact breccia – rock composed of fragments of terrestrial, extraterrestrial or mixed origin fused by the energy of impact
 - Impactite – informal term for a terrestrial rock resulting from the shocking impact of a meteor.
 - Iron–nickel alloy – an alternative expression for meteoric iron.
 - Iron meteorite – a meteorite that is mainly composed of meteoric iron.
 
K
- Kakangari chondrite – a group of chondrite meteorites.
 - Kamacite – a native metal (mineral) found in meteorites.
 
L
- Lodranite – member of a small group of primitive achondrites thought to derive from deeper within the same parent body as acapulcoites
 - Lunaite – a meteorite that originated from the Moon (synonym of Lunar meteorite). Compare Category:Meteorites found on bodies other than Earth.
 - Lunar meteorite – a meteorite that originated from the Moon (synonym of Lunaite). Compare Category:Meteorites found on bodies other than Earth.
 
M
- Main group pallasite – a pallasite belonging to the main group.
 - Main mass – the largest/heaviest piece of a fragmented meteorite, typically found in a strewn field.
 - Magmatic meteorite
 - Martian meteorite – a meteorite that originated from Mars. Compare Category:Meteorites found on bodies other than Earth.
 - Maskelynite – a natural glass found in meteorites.
 - Matrix – the mineral assemblage surrounding chondrules.
 - Mesosiderite – a grouping of stony-iron meteorite that are breccias.
 - Meteoric iron – a native metal found in meteorites and a mixture of different mineral phases. Compare telluric iron.
 - Meteorite Observation and Recovery Program – a scientific program that was centered in Canada.
 - Meteoriticist – a scientist working on meteorites, meteors, and meteoroids.
 - Meteoritics – the science of meteorites, meteors, and meteoroids.
 - MORP – abbreviation for Meteorite Observation and Recovery Program.
 - Micrometeorite – microscopic meteorites derived from Cosmic dust.
 
N
- Nakhlite – a group of Martian meteorites
 - Neumann lines (or Neumann bands) – a pattern of fine parallel lines seen in some iron meteorites, thought to be due to impact events on the parent body
 - Nonmagmatic meteorite – (deprecated) iron meteorites that were thought to have not formed by igneous processes.
 
O
- O – usually refers to ordinary chondrite
 - Observed fall – a meteorite that was seen when it fell to Earth.
 - Octahedrite – the most common structural class of iron meteorites.
 - Ordinary chondrite – a chondrite meteorite, where 'ordinary' means that it is the most common found
 
P
- PAC – abbreviation for primitive achondrite.
 - Pallasite – a class of stony–iron meteorite.
 - Panspermia – the hypothesis that life could reach other planets by the means of meteorites and/or comets.
 - Parent body – the celestial body from which originates a meteorite or a class of meteorites.
 - Petrologic type – a classification scheme that expresses the degree to which a meteorite has been affected by the secondary processes of thermal metamorphism and aqueous alteration on the parent asteroid.
 - Pitts grouplet – a grouplet of meteorites that is part of the IAB meteorites.
 - Planetary achondrite – an achondrite that was differentiated on a planet and not a planetesimal or asteroid (See asteroidal achondrite).[4]
 - Plessite – a fine grained intergrowth found in meteoric iron consisting of kamacite, taenite and tetrataenite lamella.[5]
 - Presolar grains – interstellar solid matter in the form of tiny solid grains from a time before the Sun was formed.
 - Primitive meteorite
 - Primitive achondrite – a meteorite that has similarities to achondrites and chondrites.
 - Protoplanetary disk – a circumstellar disk from which all solids in the Solar System formed.
 - Pyroxene pallasite grouplet
 
R
Regmaglypts on Sikhote Alin
- Regmaglypts – thumbprint-sized indentations in the surface of larger meteorites formed by ablation as the meteorite passes through a planet's atmosphere, probably caused by vortices of hot gas.[6]
 - Rose-Tschermak-Brezina classification – a classification developed by Gustav Rose, Gustav Tschermak and Aristides Brezina.
 - Rumuruti chondrite – a group of chondrites.
 
S
- Shergottite – igneous rocks of mafic to ultramafic lithology, named after a meteorite that fell at Sherghati, India in 1865.
 - Shock stage – a measure of the degree of fracturing of the matrix of a common chondrite meteorite.
 - Shock metamorphism – the effects of shock-wave related deformation and heating during impact events.
 - Siderite – the old term for iron meteorite.
 - Siderolite – the old term for stony-iron meteorites.
 - SNC – abbreviation for shergottite, nakhlite and chassignite, the three main types of Martian meteorite.
 - Solar nebula – a synonym of the protoplanetary disk.
 - Spectral class –
 - Stony meteorite – a meteorite composed mostly of silicates.
 - Stony-iron meteorite – a meteorite that is a mixture of meteoric iron and silicates.
 - Strewn field – a field of fragments from one meteorite fall.
 - Structural class – a subdivision of iron meteorites in ataxites, hexahedrites and octahedrites.
 - Superbolide – is a bolide that reaches an apparent magnitude of −17 or brighter, which is roughly 100 times brighter than the full moon. Recent examples of superbolides include the Sutter's Mill meteorite and the Chelyabinsk meteor.
 
T
- Taenite – a native metal (mineral) found in meteorites.
 - Tamdakht – a meteorite that fell near Ouarzazate, Morocco on 2008-12-20 producing a strewn field of approximately 25 km (16 mi) by 2 km (1.2 mi) and two small impact craters.
 - Tektite – glassy terrestrial debris created by meteorite impacts.
 - Thumbprinting – see regmaglypts
 - Total known weight (TKW) – total known mass of a meteorite.
 - Trio – a grouping of three meteorites that share similar characteristics (see Grouplet).
 - Type – subdivision of meteorites. Loosely defined. Usually refers to chondrite, achondrite and sometimes primitive achondrite.[1]
 
U
- Udei Station grouplet – a grouplet of meteorites that is part of the IAB meteorites.
 - Ungrouped – a meteorite that has not been assigned to a group or grouplet.
 - Undifferentiated
 - Ureilite
 
V
- Vesta – second largest asteroid in the asteroid belt and likely source of the HED meteorites.
 - Volatile elements – are chemical elements that have low boiling and condensation temperatures.
 
W
- Widmanstätten pattern – a fine interleaving of kamacite and taenite bands/ribbons found in octahedrite irons and some pallasites.
 - Willamette meteorite – the largest meteorite discovered in North America, found in the Willamette Valley of Oregon.
 - Winonaite – a type of primitive achondrite meteorite.
 - Weston meteorite – a meteorite which fell to earth above the town of Weston, Connecticut on December 14, 1807.[7]
 
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 M. K. Weisberg; T. J. McCoy, A. N. Krot (2006). "Systematics and Evaluation of Meteorite Classification" (PDF). In D. S. Lauretta; H. Y. McSween, Jr. (eds.). Meteorites and the early solar system II. Tucson: University of Arizona Press. pp. 19–52, 942. ISBN 978-0816525621. Retrieved 15 December 2012.
 - ↑  McSween, Harry Y. (2021). Cosmochemistry. Gary R. Huss. Cambridge, United Kingdom. ISBN 978-1-108-88526-3. OCLC 1259294621.
{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - ↑ Schmitz, B.; Tassinari, M. (2001), "Fossil Meteorites", in Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B.; Schmitz, B. (eds.), Accretion of Extraterrestrial Matter Throughout Earth's History, New York: Springer, pp. 319–31, doi:10.1007/978-1-4419-8694-8_17, ISBN 978-1-4613-4668-5
 - ↑ Agee, C. B.; N.V. Wilson; F.M. McCubbin; Z.D. Sharp; K. Ziegler (2012). "Basaltic Breccia NWA 7034: New ungrouped planetary Achondrite" (PDF). 43rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference (1659): 2690. Bibcode:2012LPI....43.2690A. Retrieved 4 January 2013.
 - ↑ Goldstein, J. I.; Michael, J. R. (1 April 2006). "The formation of plessite in meteoritic metal". Meteoritics & Planetary Science. 41 (4): 553–70. Bibcode:2006M&PS...41..553G. doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.2006.tb00482.x.
 - ↑ "regmaglypts". Meteorite or Meteorwrong?. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Washington University in St. Louis. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
 - ↑ "The Weston Meteorite (Yale Peabody Museum)". 7 December 2010.
 
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