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June 15, 2021.
DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
UCLA METEORITE GALLERY MONTHLY LECTURES :: METEORITICAL UCLA Meteorite Gallery Monthly Lectures. September 8, 2020. The monthly lectures at the UCLA Meteorite Gallery are open to members of the Meteoritical Society. The UCLA Meteorite Gallery Lecture Series will now operate on the third Sunday of every month. Registration is only needed once as this is a recurring meeting in Zoom. GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. MAPS SPECIAL ISSUE FOR JOHN T. WASSON :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A special issue of Meteoritics and Planetary Science honoring John T. Wasson, who passed away on 8 September 2020 is planned for fall 2021. Wasson spent more than 50 years as a professor and meteorite researcher at UCLA. He was President of the Meteoritical Society in 1979-1980. He received the Leonard Medal from the Meteoritical Society in 2002 and the J. Lawrence Smith award from the STUART ROSS TAYLOR (1925-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stuart Ross Taylor, Leonard Medalist (1998) and former president of the Meteoritical Society (1989-1990) passed away at his home in Canberra, Australia, this month. Ross was a geochemist who made seminal contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of Earth’s continental crust, and the composition and origin of the Moon, meteorites, tektites, and the solar system. 2020 JOANNA MORGAN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Citation: Natalia Artemieva and Sean Gulick. Joanna Morgan is a Professor of Geophysics in the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College, London. She received a BSc in Geophysics from Southampton (1980) and a PhD in Marine Geophysics from Cambridge (1988). The year of her BSc coincided with publication ofthe pioneering
HOME :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSOCIETYPUBLICATIONSAWARDSNEWSCONTACTGOVERNANCE The Meteoritical Society is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY 2021 ( 84 th Annual Meeting) August 14-21, Chicago, USA. 2022 (85 th Annual Meeting) August TBD, Glasgow, UK. 2023 (86 th Annual Meeting) July 3-8, Perth, Australia. 2024 (87 th Annual Meeting) July/August, Brussels, Belgium (EU). Download information on previous meetings of REGISTRATION FOR THE 84TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE The 84th Annual Meeting of the Meteoritical Society on August 15–21, 2021, will be an in-person meeting held at the Hilton Chicago located downtown with views overlooking Grant Park, Lake Michigan, and the Museum Campus. Virtual attendance will be possible for those who cannot travel to Chicago. Registration Early registration closes onJune 15, 2021.
DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
UCLA METEORITE GALLERY MONTHLY LECTURES :: METEORITICAL UCLA Meteorite Gallery Monthly Lectures. September 8, 2020. The monthly lectures at the UCLA Meteorite Gallery are open to members of the Meteoritical Society. The UCLA Meteorite Gallery Lecture Series will now operate on the third Sunday of every month. Registration is only needed once as this is a recurring meeting in Zoom. GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. MAPS SPECIAL ISSUE FOR JOHN T. WASSON :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A special issue of Meteoritics and Planetary Science honoring John T. Wasson, who passed away on 8 September 2020 is planned for fall 2021. Wasson spent more than 50 years as a professor and meteorite researcher at UCLA. He was President of the Meteoritical Society in 1979-1980. He received the Leonard Medal from the Meteoritical Society in 2002 and the J. Lawrence Smith award from the STUART ROSS TAYLOR (1925-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stuart Ross Taylor, Leonard Medalist (1998) and former president of the Meteoritical Society (1989-1990) passed away at his home in Canberra, Australia, this month. Ross was a geochemist who made seminal contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of Earth’s continental crust, and the composition and origin of the Moon, meteorites, tektites, and the solar system. 2020 JOANNA MORGAN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Citation: Natalia Artemieva and Sean Gulick. Joanna Morgan is a Professor of Geophysics in the Department of Earth Science and Engineering at Imperial College, London. She received a BSc in Geophysics from Southampton (1980) and a PhD in Marine Geophysics from Cambridge (1988). The year of her BSc coincided with publication ofthe pioneering
NEWS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stuart Ross Taylor, Leonard Medalist (1998) and former president of the Meteoritical Society (1989-1990) passed away at his home in Canberra, Australia, this month. Ross was a geochemist who made seminal contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of Earth’s continental crust, and the composition and origin of theMoon
REGISTRATION FOR THE 84TH ANNUAL MEETING OF THE The 84th Annual Meeting of the Meteoritical Society on August 15–21, 2021, will be an in-person meeting held at the Hilton Chicago located downtown with views overlooking Grant Park, Lake Michigan, and the Museum Campus. Virtual attendance will be possible for those who cannot travel to Chicago. Registration Early registration closes onJune 15, 2021.
LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. JOIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY 2021 Membership. Membership in the Society is open to any person interested in meteoritics and related sciences regardless of residence, citizenship or age. Memberships are entered and renewed on a calendar year basis (Jan 1 through Dec 31). You will receive all publications for the year you join beginning when your application isprocessed; if
MEMBERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Membership. Meteoritical Society members include 1000 scientists and amateur enthusiasts from 52 countries who are engaged in planetary science. Their interests include meteorites, cosmic dust, asteroids and comets, natural satellites, planets, impacts, and the origins of the Solar System. Join Now. CONTACT US :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Join The Society. Fill out one of our forms. Or contact the Treasurer, Tasha Dunn (tldunn@colby.edu).Renew your membership. Use our membership website. Comments or questions about membership LUNAR SAMPLES :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Lunar Samples. Lunar samples are pieces of our nearest neighbor in space, the Moon. All told, there is about 385 kg (about 840 lbs) of material originally from the Moon in the worldwide collection. Most of this material (about 382 kg) was collected by U.S. astronauts during the Apollo program (1969-1972), but the collection also includes METEORITICS AND PLANETARY SCIENCE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MaPS) was first issued in 1953 as Meteoritics.MaPS is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles describing the latest results of new studies, invited reviews of major topics in planetary science, editorials on issues of current interest in the field, and book reviews. OFFICERS AND COUNCIL :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Officers for 2021-2022. The Meteoritical Society is administered by executive officers elected from its membership. The five Officers and eight Councilors, each serving a two-year term, form the Council of the Society. The President, Secretary, and Treasurer constitute the Executive Committee. NIER PRIZE WINNERS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY 1996 Leshin, Laurie; 1997 McCoy, Timothy J. 1998 Srinivasan, Gopalan; 1999 Choi, Byeon-Gak; 2000 Wadhwa, Meenakshi; 2001 Nittler, Larry; 2002 Lauretta, Dante HOME :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSOCIETYPUBLICATIONSAWARDSNEWSCONTACTGOVERNANCE The Meteoritical Society is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY 2021 ( 84 th Annual Meeting) August 14-21, Chicago, USA. 2022 (85 th Annual Meeting) August TBD, Glasgow, UK. 2023 (86 th Annual Meeting) July 3-8, Perth, Australia. 2024 (87 th Annual Meeting) July/August, Brussels, Belgium (EU). Download information on previous meetings of ABOUT THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Meteoritical Society is a non-profit scholarly organization founded in 1933 to promote research and education in planetary science with emphasis on studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials, including samples from space missions, that further our understanding of the origin and history of the solar system. LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. CONTACT US :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Join The Society. Fill out one of our forms. Or contact the Treasurer, Tasha Dunn (tldunn@colby.edu).Renew your membership. Use our membership website. Comments or questions about membership MEMBERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ON METEORITICAL.ORG DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ONMETEORITICAL.ORG
GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. HOME :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSOCIETYPUBLICATIONSAWARDSNEWSCONTACTGOVERNANCE The Meteoritical Society is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY 2021 ( 84 th Annual Meeting) August 14-21, Chicago, USA. 2022 (85 th Annual Meeting) August TBD, Glasgow, UK. 2023 (86 th Annual Meeting) July 3-8, Perth, Australia. 2024 (87 th Annual Meeting) July/August, Brussels, Belgium (EU). Download information on previous meetings of ABOUT THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Meteoritical Society is a non-profit scholarly organization founded in 1933 to promote research and education in planetary science with emphasis on studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials, including samples from space missions, that further our understanding of the origin and history of the solar system. LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. CONTACT US :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Join The Society. Fill out one of our forms. Or contact the Treasurer, Tasha Dunn (tldunn@colby.edu).Renew your membership. Use our membership website. Comments or questions about membership MEMBERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ON METEORITICAL.ORG DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ONMETEORITICAL.ORG
GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. NEWS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stuart Ross Taylor, Leonard Medalist (1998) and former president of the Meteoritical Society (1989-1990) passed away at his home in Canberra, Australia, this month. Ross was a geochemist who made seminal contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of Earth’s continental crust, and the composition and origin of theMoon
LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. PUBLICATIONS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Meteoritical Society produces several regular and high profile publications. Meteoritics and Planetary Science. Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS) is the journal of the Meteoritical Society and one of the leading planetary science journals in the world. EDUCATIONAL & SCIENTIFIC RESOURCES :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Meteorites and their Properties, a site dedicated to providing information about meteorites to the general public, and K-12 teachers. Windows to the Universe, a site devoted to current space research, including up-to-the-minute 'space weather' information. Meteor Crater, Arizona, U.S.A., homepage of one of the most dramatic, and mostaccessible
JOHN T. WASSON (1934-2020) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY John Taylor Wasson, Emeritus Professor in UCLA’s Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, passed away peacefully at his long-time home in Los Angeles on September 8, 2020, at the age of 86. He had suffered a stroke in January, but had courageously battled back, improving in many ways, before his sudden passing. John was passionate about meteorites and what their properties LUNAR SAMPLES :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Lunar Samples. Lunar samples are pieces of our nearest neighbor in space, the Moon. All told, there is about 385 kg (about 840 lbs) of material originally from the Moon in the worldwide collection. Most of this material (about 382 kg) was collected by U.S. astronauts during the Apollo program (1969-1972), but the collection also includes AWARDS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Service Award, established in 2005, honors members who have advanced the goals of the Society to promote research and education in meteoritics and planetary science in ways other than by conducting scientific research. Examples of activities that could be honored include, but are not limited to, education and public outreach,service to the
METEORITICS AND PLANETARY SCIENCE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MaPS) was first issued in 1953 as Meteoritics.MaPS is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles describing the latest results of new studies, invited reviews of major topics in planetary science, editorials on issues of current interest in the field, and book reviews. NIER PRIZE WINNERS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY 1996 Leshin, Laurie; 1997 McCoy, Timothy J. 1998 Srinivasan, Gopalan; 1999 Choi, Byeon-Gak; 2000 Wadhwa, Meenakshi; 2001 Nittler, Larry; 2002 Lauretta, Dante LEADERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Leadership. The Meteoritical Society is governed by an elected Council of Officers and Councilors chosen from its 1000 members in 52 nations; it does not maintain a headquarters or staff. The Society's activities are administered through Committees that report to the Council. HOME :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSOCIETYPUBLICATIONSAWARDSNEWSCONTACTGOVERNANCE The Meteoritical Society is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE METEORITICAL SOCIETYNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL BULLETINMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICALSOCIETY LONDON
2021 ( 84 th Annual Meeting) August 14-21, Chicago, USA. 2022 (85 th Annual Meeting) August TBD, Glasgow, UK. 2023 (86 th Annual Meeting) July 3-8, Perth, Australia. 2024 (87 th Annual Meeting) July/August, Brussels, Belgium (EU). Download information on previous meetings of ABOUT THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICAL BULLETINNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY BULLETINMETEORITICAL BULLETIN DATABASEMETEORITICAL SOCIETY LONDON The Meteoritical Society is a non-profit scholarly organization founded in 1933 to promote research and education in planetary science with emphasis on studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials, including samples from space missions, that further our understanding of the origin and history of the solar system. LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETYNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICAL SOCIETY BULLETINMETEORITICAL SOCIETY DATABASEMETEORITICAL SOCIETY MEETING 2020 Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. CONTACT US :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Join The Society. Fill out one of our forms. Or contact the Treasurer, Tasha Dunn (tldunn@colby.edu).Renew your membership. Use our membership website. Comments or questions about membership MEMBERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ON METEORITICAL.ORG DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ONMETEORITICAL.ORG
GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. HOME :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSOCIETYPUBLICATIONSAWARDSNEWSCONTACTGOVERNANCE The Meteoritical Society is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. ANNUAL MEETINGS OF THE METEORITICAL SOCIETYNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL BULLETINMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICALSOCIETY LONDON
2021 ( 84 th Annual Meeting) August 14-21, Chicago, USA. 2022 (85 th Annual Meeting) August TBD, Glasgow, UK. 2023 (86 th Annual Meeting) July 3-8, Perth, Australia. 2024 (87 th Annual Meeting) July/August, Brussels, Belgium (EU). Download information on previous meetings of ABOUT THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICAL BULLETINNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY BULLETINMETEORITICAL BULLETIN DATABASEMETEORITICAL SOCIETY LONDON The Meteoritical Society is a non-profit scholarly organization founded in 1933 to promote research and education in planetary science with emphasis on studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials, including samples from space missions, that further our understanding of the origin and history of the solar system. LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETYNEW ENGLAND METEORITICAL SOCIETYMETEORITICAL SOCIETY 2020METEORITICAL SOCIETY BULLETINMETEORITICAL SOCIETY DATABASEMETEORITICAL SOCIETY MEETING 2020 Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. CONTACT US :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Join The Society. Fill out one of our forms. Or contact the Treasurer, Tasha Dunn (tldunn@colby.edu).Renew your membership. Use our membership website. Comments or questions about membership MEMBERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ON METEORITICAL.ORG DUST :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY A synopsis by P.H. Benoit. Interplanetary dust particles (or IDPs in common useage) are extremely small (0.001 cm in diameter) grains or particles found on Earth that are most probably from outer space. Their small size poses a problem for the most common chemical and petrographic analytical techniques and thus research into IDPs ismarked by
OFFICERS AND COUNCIL :: METEORITICAL SOCIETYSEE MORE ONMETEORITICAL.ORG
GÜNTER W. LUGMAIR (1940-2021) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Günter W. Lugmair passed away on March 31 after a short illness. A Fellow of the Meteoritical Society since 1980 when he also served as an organizer of the Annual Meeting in La Jolla, and winner of the society’s Leonard Medal, Günter’s mastery of the mass spectrometer pushed the precision of isotopic measurements to new levels. He pioneered the applications of new radiometric NOMENCLATURE COMMITTEE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Nomenclature Committee. This committee is responsible for establishing guidelines for the naming of new meteorites and for overseeing the publication of the Meteoritical Bulletin in Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS). Twelve members are appointed to 3-year terms by the President for a maximum of two consecutive terms. NEWS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stuart Ross Taylor, Leonard Medalist (1998) and former president of the Meteoritical Society (1989-1990) passed away at his home in Canberra, Australia, this month. Ross was a geochemist who made seminal contributions to our understanding of the origin and evolution of Earth’s continental crust, and the composition and origin of theMoon
LOGIN :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Stay signed in for 14 days . Log in Forgot Password. PUBLICATIONS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Meteoritical Society produces several regular and high profile publications. Meteoritics and Planetary Science. Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MAPS) is the journal of the Meteoritical Society and one of the leading planetary science journals in the world. EDUCATIONAL & SCIENTIFIC RESOURCES :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Meteorites and their Properties, a site dedicated to providing information about meteorites to the general public, and K-12 teachers. Windows to the Universe, a site devoted to current space research, including up-to-the-minute 'space weather' information. Meteor Crater, Arizona, U.S.A., homepage of one of the most dramatic, and mostaccessible
JOHN T. WASSON (1934-2020) :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY John Taylor Wasson, Emeritus Professor in UCLA’s Department of Earth, Planetary, and Space Sciences, passed away peacefully at his long-time home in Los Angeles on September 8, 2020, at the age of 86. He had suffered a stroke in January, but had courageously battled back, improving in many ways, before his sudden passing. John was passionate about meteorites and what their properties LUNAR SAMPLES :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Lunar Samples. Lunar samples are pieces of our nearest neighbor in space, the Moon. All told, there is about 385 kg (about 840 lbs) of material originally from the Moon in the worldwide collection. Most of this material (about 382 kg) was collected by U.S. astronauts during the Apollo program (1969-1972), but the collection also includes AWARDS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY The Service Award, established in 2005, honors members who have advanced the goals of the Society to promote research and education in meteoritics and planetary science in ways other than by conducting scientific research. Examples of activities that could be honored include, but are not limited to, education and public outreach,service to the
METEORITICS AND PLANETARY SCIENCE :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Meteoritics and Planetary Science (MaPS) was first issued in 1953 as Meteoritics.MaPS is a peer-reviewed journal that publishes original research articles describing the latest results of new studies, invited reviews of major topics in planetary science, editorials on issues of current interest in the field, and book reviews. NIER PRIZE WINNERS :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY 1996 Leshin, Laurie; 1997 McCoy, Timothy J. 1998 Srinivasan, Gopalan; 1999 Choi, Byeon-Gak; 2000 Wadhwa, Meenakshi; 2001 Nittler, Larry; 2002 Lauretta, Dante LEADERSHIP :: METEORITICAL SOCIETY Leadership. The Meteoritical Society is governed by an elected Council of Officers and Councilors chosen from its 1000 members in 52 nations; it does not maintain a headquarters or staff. The Society's activities are administered through Committees that report to the Council. This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on ourwebsite.Learn more
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Meteorites. Asteroids. Comets. Natural satellites. Planets. Impact Craters. Origin of the Solar System. THE METEORITICAL SOCIETY is an international organization dedicated to the promotion of research and education in planetary science with emphasis on the studies of meteorites and other extraterrestrial materials that further our understanding of the origin of the solar system. The Society was established in 1933. Our members, from 52 nations, span the range of planetary science. We are scientists, amateur scientists and enthusiasts. The Meteoritical Society: * promotes research and education.
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* Jun 2, 2021, 9:13 AM Student and Early Career Travel Awards forMetSoc 2021
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* Jun 2, 2021, 9:13 AM Student and Early Career Travel Awards forMetSoc 2021
* May 24, 2021, 11:01 AM Stuart Ross Taylor (1925-2021) * May 3, 2021, 4:14 PM Pellas-Ryder Award for 2021 to Jan L.Hellmann
* Apr 15, 2021, 2:08 PM Günter W. Lugmair (1940-2021) Privacy Policy | Photo Credits 2005-2021 The Meteoritical SocietyDetails
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