[meteorite-list] How Many Lunar Meteorites?

Linton Rohr lintonius at earthlink.net
Mon Aug 23 16:16:42 EDT 2010


Still true, Eric.
Though there's a couple guys on E-Bay who would argue that with us. <g>
Linton

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Meteorites USA" <eric at meteoritesusa.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 1:07 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] How Many Lunar Meteorites?


>I also noticed, there are no Lunar meteorites recovered in the USA. Yet...
>
> Does this still hold true?
>
> Eric
>
>
> On 8/23/2010 11:53 AM, Randy Korotev wrote:
>> Dear Eric:
>>
>> My alphanumeric list contains 140 named stones,
>>
>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/lunar/moon_meteorites_list_alpha.htm
>>
>> with the caveat that some do not actually have official names yet (e.g., 
>> "Unnamed 12").  They're on the list because I've analyzed them and know 
>> them to be lunar.  That's the main reason that my number, 140, is larger 
>> than the MetBull number, 130.  It's my hope that all the unnamed get 
>> official names someday.
>>
>> "Does this mean there are 130 Lunar meteorites that have been recovered 
>> and classified, Ever?"  Stones, yes; meteorites, no.
>>
>> My composition-ordered list has only 68 meteorites because of known or 
>> strongly-suspected pairings.
>>
>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/lunar/moon_meteorites_list_alumina.htm
>>
>> Norbert Classen keeps close tabs on this and has 67 on his list (he and I 
>> both know about one that is on my list but may not be on his list yet):
>>
>> http://www.meteoris.de/luna/list.html
>>
>> So, ~68 is the total number of known lunar meteorites.  That information 
>> is not easily available from the MetBull database.  It sometimes takes 
>> years to establish that different named stones are or are not paired.
>>
>> A confusion for your calculations is that practically every individual 
>> lunar and martian meteorite stone gets it's own name and line-item in the 
>> MetBull database whereas all Allende stones have one name.
>>
>> Randy
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> At 12:40 PM 8/23/2010 Monday, you wrote:
>>> Hi List,
>>>
>>> I know this has been talked about on-list but... I keep getting this 
>>> question, or people that say they have found a "Lunar" meteorite. I'm 
>>> wondering how many there actually are. I've heard numbers thrown about 
>>> haphazardly, but no one has been able to give me a clear and concise 
>>> answer.
>>>
>>> The Met-Bull has "...130 records found for meteorites with historical 
>>> types that contain "Lunar"...'
>>>
>>> Does this mean there are 130 Lunar meteorites that have been recovered 
>>> and classified, Ever? Or is my search flawed? (as a side note, it also 
>>> says there are "...92 records found for meteorites with historical types 
>>> that contain "Martian"...")
>>>
>>> Dr. Randy Korotev's "List of Lunar Meteorites" on the Washinton 
>>> University website has the number at 140. 
>>> http://meteorites.wustl.edu/lunar/moon_meteorites_list_alpha.htm
>>>
>>> Just for giggles I wanted to know how many total classified meteorites 
>>> there actually were on the planet.
>>>
>>> "...39146 valid meteorite names; 11959 provisional names; 4589 full-text 
>>> writeups..."
>>>
>>> That's a whopping 51,105 classifications. Wow!
>>>
>>> Doing some simple math, 130 Lunar meteorites out of 51,105 total 
>>> classifications means that "Lunars" only makeup about 0.254% of the 
>>> total number of meteorite ever classified. (0.180% for Martian 
>>> meteorites).
>>>
>>> Are these number correct?
>>>
>>> Regards,
>>> Eric
>>>
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