| | Book | resulted, their recovery, and the history of meteorite studies since the time when it was established...1.1. Thunderstones and the Origins of Modern Meteorite Research 1.2. The Early Nineteenth Century 1.3...Minerals Meteorite Falls and Associated Phenomena 2.1 Introduction 2.2. Non-Crater-Forming Meteorite Falls...Falls 2.2.1. The Phenomena of Meteorite Falls 2.2.2. The Scatter Ellipse 2.2.3. Morphology and the Fusion...2.2.4. Meteorite Recovery 2.2.5. Terrestrial Ages of Meteorite Finds 2.3. Explosive Meteorite Craters | | | Journal (article/letter/editorial) | Oxford is 1839 grams. With a specimen of the meteorite sent to H. J. Brooke by G. B. Sowerby in 1848...him. I have ascertained that fragments of the meteorite exist at the present time in the following collections...various constituent minerals present ill the meteorite, the methods adopted by Mr. L. Fletcher 1 in the...could readily be determined in the ease of a meteorite free from rust when mercuric extraction was commenced...Magazine, 1908, vol. xv, p. 147. s The anomalous taenite, isolated by acid from the Beaconsfield iron, alone |
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