A Meteorite Killed My Cow: Stuff That Happens When Space Rocks Hit Earth

A Meteorite Killed My Cow: Stuff That Happens When Space Rocks Hit Earth

by Richard Greenwood
A Meteorite Killed My Cow: Stuff That Happens When Space Rocks Hit Earth
A Meteorite Killed My Cow: Stuff That Happens When Space Rocks Hit Earth

A Meteorite Killed My Cow: Stuff That Happens When Space Rocks Hit Earth

by Richard Greenwood

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Overview

Features:

•         Provides a concise introduction to the world of meteorites in an accessible and non-technical way.

•         Demonstrates how meteorites can be found locally and provides practical guidance on how to search for them!

•         Emphasizes the human side of meteorites and how ordinary people can and do encounter meteorites in a wide variety of settings.

Richard Greenwood is a Senior Research Fellow at the Open University in Milton Keynes, UK. He undertakes detailed studies of meteorites and their constituent components with the aim of understanding the origin and early evolution of our Solar System. Characterizing and classifying new meteorite samples is a particularly enjoyable part of his work. He is also responsible for the curation of the Open University’s extensive meteorite collection. He also runs a popular outreach blog on meteorites: https://meteoritestheblog.com/.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780367774486
Publisher: CRC Press
Publication date: 05/08/2024
Pages: 250
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Richard Greenwood is a Senior Research Fellow at the Open University, UK. A geologist by training, he started studying meteorites quite by accident after answering an advert in a science magazine. Life has never been quite the same since. Some of his close encounters with extraterrestrial rocks are described in this book. In particular, he was the first scientist to identify the Winchcombe meteorite. But things haven’t always gone totally to plan. Failure to find a single space rock on a Moroccan expedition in the 1990s still hurts. Full disclosure is provided here.

Richard’s more academic activities involve the study of meteorites with the aim of understanding the origin and early evolution of our Solar System. Spacecraft are now collecting material directly from asteroids and bringing the samples back to Earth. Richard has been at the heart of these activities, working with international teams analyzing material brought back by the Japanese Space Agency (JAXA) from asteroid Ryugu and by the NASA OSIRIS-REx mission from Asteroid Bennu. He also maintains a popular outreach blog on meteorites: https://meteoritestheblog.com/.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1: Dead Cow. Chapter 2: Mr Pettifor's Garden - A Very English Meteorite Adventure. Chapter 3: Yes you have meteorites in your garden too! Lots of them! Chapter 4: Dinosaur Killers. Chapter 5: The Spy, the Meteorite, and the Lost Legendary City. Chapter 6: What have meteorites ever done for us? Chapter 7: A meteorite called Camel Donga. Chapter 8: The tall tale of the soldier who found a monster-sized meteorite and then lost it! Chapter 9: Having a smashing time - The story of Meteor Crater. Chapter 10: The Winchcombe meteorite – An extra-terrestrial splat! Chapter 11: 1969 and all that. Chapter 12: Antarctica – cool rocks from a cool place. Chapter 13: Desert Gold. Chapter 14: Capturing metoerites in space. Chapter 15: The chances of anything coming from Mars. Chapter 16: Grains from before the dawn of time. Frequently Asked Questions. Appendix 1: So You Think you Have Found a Meteorite - What Next? Appendix 2: Meteorites - A Very Short Guide. Index. Chapter Notes.    

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