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Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites (2008)

by O. Richard Norton

Other authors: See the other authors section.

Series: Patrick Moore's Practical Astronomy Series

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Imagine the unique experience of being the very first person to hold a newly-found meteorite in your hand ? a rock from space, older than Earth! "Weekend meteorite hunting" with magnets and metal detectors is becoming ever more popular as a pastime, but of course you can ?t just walk around and pick up meteorites in the same way that you can pick up seashells on the beach. Those fragments that survived the intense heat of re-entry tend to disguise themselves as natural rocks over time, and it takes a trained eye ? along with the information in this book ? to recognize them. Just as amateur astronomers are familiar with the telescopes and accessories needed to study a celestial object, amateur meteoriticists have to use equipment ranging from simple hand lenses to microscopes to study a specimen, to identify its type and origins. Equipment and techniques are covered in detail here of course, along with a complete and fully illustrated guide to what you might find and where you might find it. In fact, the Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites contains pretty much everything an amateur astronomer ? or geologist ? needs to know about meteors and meteorites.… (more)
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This is, In my opinion, the best book on meteors, metorites etc. The authors explain the subject in detail, describing the various types of meteorites. The volume is copiously illustrated. I you only want one book on the subject, this is it ( )
  T.Rex | Nov 1, 2010 |
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Author nameRoleType of authorWork?Status
O. Richard Nortonprimary authorall editionscalculated
Chitwood, Lawrence A.Authorsecondary authorsome editionsconfirmed
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To Lawrence A. Chitwood,
co-author, colleague and good friend,
who died suddenly shortly after this book was completed -
His passion for minerals in meteorites, expertise in the use of the petrographic microscope,
and remarkable ability to make this complex science understandable
contributed greatly to the production of this book.
He will be sorely missed.
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Popular and scientific interest in meteorites is at an all-time high and growing.
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Imagine the unique experience of being the very first person to hold a newly-found meteorite in your hand ? a rock from space, older than Earth! "Weekend meteorite hunting" with magnets and metal detectors is becoming ever more popular as a pastime, but of course you can ?t just walk around and pick up meteorites in the same way that you can pick up seashells on the beach. Those fragments that survived the intense heat of re-entry tend to disguise themselves as natural rocks over time, and it takes a trained eye ? along with the information in this book ? to recognize them. Just as amateur astronomers are familiar with the telescopes and accessories needed to study a celestial object, amateur meteoriticists have to use equipment ranging from simple hand lenses to microscopes to study a specimen, to identify its type and origins. Equipment and techniques are covered in detail here of course, along with a complete and fully illustrated guide to what you might find and where you might find it. In fact, the Field Guide to Meteors and Meteorites contains pretty much everything an amateur astronomer ? or geologist ? needs to know about meteors and meteorites.

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