Meteorite find

{{Short description|Meteorite that was found by people, but whose fall was not observed}}

File:Search_for_meteorites_at_the_Dhofar_Desert.jpgs in the Dhofar Desert in the Arabian Peninsula (Dhofar Governorate, Oman, November 2012)]]

A meteorite find is a meteorite that was found by people, but whose fall was not observed.{{cite book |first1=Ronald A. |last1=Oriti |first2=William B. |last2=Starbird |title=Introduction to Astronomy |publisher=Glencoe Press |year=1977 |page=168 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=g3vvAAAAMAAJ&q=%22referred+to+as+a+find%22}} They may have been on Earth's surface for as many as thousands of years and therefore could have been subject to varying amounts of weathering.

Finds are distinguished from "meteorite falls", which are those which were observed during their descent and collected shortly afterwards.

All officially recognized meteorites are listed in databases such as the Meteoritical Bulletin Database, most of which have specimens in modern collections.

See also

References

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