[meteorite-list] Re: lunar meteorites
From: Michael Farmer <meteoritehunter_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Mar 21 13:24:56 2005 Message-ID: <005801c527fe$e9cfbfd0$0300a8c0_at_S0031628003> This is a little off, Lunar meteorite have also been found in Asia, Oman is Asia, not Africa. Mike Farmer ----- Original Message ----- From: "AL Mitterling" <almitt_at_kconline.com> To: "David Freeman" <dfreeman_at_fascination.com> Cc: "Steve Arnold, Chicago!!!" <steve_arnol60120_at_yahoo.com>; <meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Sunday, March 13, 2005 11:16 AM Subject: [meteorite-list] Re: lunar meteorites > Hi List, > > I put together a list of interesting (to me anyway) Lunar bits of > information. Here they are. > > --AL Mitterling > > > Lunar Tidbits Of Interest > > *The finding of the ALH81005 (lunar meteorite) was an important find and > help to establish the existence of lunar meteorites on Earth. It was > picked up at the last minute by an antarctic researcher who was > trained in recognizing meteorites on the ice as he headed for shelter > before a bad storm. > > *Lunar Meteorites provide very important science as they sample areas that > the Apollo missions didn't get to from other areas of the Moon. Some areas > are not real safe to land on or near due to the rugged terrain. By impacts > we sample some of those areas. Lunar meteorites compliment the Apollo > material that is out there for continued science. > > > *Apollo Missions brought back 382 kg of rock, soil and samples. A total of > 12 kg (I have heard 17 kg) of lunar Meteorites have been found. One of the > largest is DAG 400 which weighs a bit over 3lbs. Soviets brought back 300 > grams of material. > > *The average lunar meteorite specimen weighs 197.02 gm. > > *Lunar Meteorites have been found on three continents. (Antarctica, > Australia, Africa). No doubt they exist in other places but due to the > "look" of regular terrestrial rocks often get overlooked. > > Lunar Meteorites reach the Earth by impactors on the Moon which cause > lunar material to be ejected. Some of that material falls back on the > Moon, Some escapes the Earth/Moon system and a percentage falls to the > Earth. Sadly 3/4 of them fall into the oceans. There are 20 or less impact > events that have provided the lunar specimens so far found (32). > > * Lunar escape velocity is 1.48 miles per second, only a few times the > muzzle velocity of a rifle. Some ejected material becomes captured by the > Earth?s gravitational field and lands on Earth within a few hundred > thousands of years or even shorter. Other ejected material, however, > assumes an orbit around the Sun. Some of that material may eventually > strike Earth. This can take a long time. Lunar meteorites > Yamato-82192/82193/86032 and Dhofar 025 remained in space for 10-20 > million years before finally landing on Earth. > > > *Lunar Meteorites tend to be broken from repeated impacts and are > breccias. Also impacts cause surrounding materials to fly with hyper > velocities and become embedded in lunar surface rocks. > This is a distinguishing characteristic of Lunar Meteorites. > > *Of the 22,507 meteorites listed in the Catalog of meteorites only .08% > are lunar. > > Sources: Washington University at St. Louis > > --AL > > ______________________________________________ > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > Received on Sun 13 Mar 2005 02:00:09 PM PST |
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