What is a meteorite?
Where do meteorites come from?
Most meteorites are fragments that have come away as two asteroids collide. Asteroids are irregular-shaped rocks that orbit the sun. There are thousands of asteroids in our solar system, most in an orbit between Mars and Jupiter known as the asteroid belt. The asteroid belt was formed when the solar system was born about 4,568 million years ago, from a cloud of gas, dust and ice.
A small proportion of meteorites come from the moon and the planet Mars. These meteorites are much younger than those from asteroids, some as young as 2500 million years and 180 million years old respectively. We know where they have come from because their composition is very similar to moon rock brought back from the Apollo lunar mission and martian soil from the Viking probe.
Where are meteorites found?
Although not many meteorites are seen hitting the ground and most fall into the sea, thousands are found each year. Meteorites can be found all over the world, but are easiest to spot in dry places, such as deserts , where they do not erode quickly and are less likely to be obscured by vegetation.
Scientists known as cosmochemists
are able to work out what has happened throughout the life of a
meteorite by studying its chemical structure, revealing a little piece
of the solar system's history one rocky chunk at a time.