About This Book
A largely nontechnical introduction to meteoritics presents meteorites as tangible samples from space and outlines methods for their observation, recovery, and laboratory study. It opens with vivid eyewitness accounts of dramatic falls in both remote and agricultural settings, describing luminous fireballs, airwaves, and local reactions. Subsequent chapters cover field procedures for locating and preserving specimens, criteria for recognizing impact craters, and protocols for weighing, sectioning, chemical and microscopic analysis, and radiometric study. The work surveys related materials such as tektites and impactites, reviews detection techniques and observational networks, and balances popular lore and historical interpretations with contemporary scientific views and practical applications.
About the Author
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