Centre de recherche et d’enseignement
des géosciences de l’environnement
Centre de recherche et d’enseignement
des géosciences de l’environnement

Nature, Octobre 2024, couverture de J. Gattacecca

Rock family tree

The cover shows a cross-sectional view of the interior of a meteorite recovered from the Mackay Glacier icefields during the 2005 field season of the Antarctic Search for Meteorites. To date only some 6% of meteorite falls have been reliably connected to their source. In this week’s issue, two papers by Michaël Marsset and colleagues and Miroslav Brož and co-workers redress that balance, suggesting a probable origin for the majority of meteorites found on Earth. The researchers focused on the two most common types of meteorite: H and L chondrites. They determined

that these probably came from three young asteroid families, suggesting that they are the remnants of collisions that occurred millions or tens of millions of years ago — much more recent than had previously been expected.

Cover image: Jérôme Gattacceca/CNRS/CEREGE

Contact

©Jérôme GATTACECCA
DR-Directeur de Recherche CEREGE
TP-Terre et Planètes

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