Following are the meteorites that many experts mention as the most significant finds to science.
L'AIGLE
In the early afternoon of April 26, 1803 thousands of meteorite fragments rained down on a town named L'Aigle in Normandy in northern France. Until that time, even witnessed meteorite falls were treated with much the same skepticism Sasquach and UFO sightings receive today. The meteoritic bombardment of L'Aigle proved to even the most skeptical critics that rocky debris does fall from the sky. After L'Aigle, meteorite falls were carefully investigated. Many natural science museums endeavored to find meteorites and and build up collections.
ALLENDE
In the wee hours of February 8, 1969 a loud detonation broke the silence of a rural region in Mexico's northern state of Chihuahua. It was the explosion of a meteor in the atmosphere, that scattered thousands of meteorites over an area of some 130 square miles. Eventually, residents of the region and meteorite-searching pilgrims collected more than three tons of fragments.
The timing of the fall couldn't have been better for planetary science. It occurred just months before the first Apollo lunar-landing mission. The federal government had spent millions of dollars building sophisticated analytical facilities at universities and federal institutions across the country in preparation for studying lunar samples that would soon be returned by Apollo astronauts. Scientists were eager to test the new equipment, and samples of meteorites proved to be a perfect opportunity. Studies on the samples showed that Allende preserved evidence of the earliest processes of the solar nebula.
MURCHISON
On September 28, 1969 a shower of meteorites fell to Earth near Murchison, Australia. Fragments scattered over a wide area. About 100 kilograms (some 220 pounds) of meteorite fragments were recovered. These fragments also benefitted from analysis in the sophisticated facilities built for the Apollo missions.
Murchison delivered the first evidence that amino acids - the building blocks of proteins and of life - exist elsewhere in the solar system. The meteorite, a type called a carbonaceous chondrite, is a primitive, carbon- and water-rich rock. It provided evidence that organic materials were either preserved from interstellar processes, or actually produced in the solar nebula. The amino acids gave chemists and biologists an opportunity to study pre-biotic chemistry in the solar system. This helps them learn about what ingredients of life were available in early solar system history.
THE MARS METEORITES
In 1983, an analysis of gas trapped in glass crystals of an antarctic meteorite found the gas to be identical to the composition of the martian atmosphere, which the Viking spacecraft measured in the mid 1970s. That study garnered widespread support for the idea that some rocks do come from Mars. Today, 14
have been identified. They are the only known samples of Mars on Earth. With the discovery of the martian meteorites, scientists could begin to study meteorites to learn about nearby planets, not just the very ancient solar system.How much have Mars Meteorites contributed to our knowledge of the solar system?
"You can ask how much we knew about the moon before we went and brought samples back," answered Timothy Swindle, a planetary scientist who studies meteorites at the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.
"Before the Apollo astronauts brought back samples, there was a wide range of ideas about the moon: Was the Moon volcanic? Had there been oceans on the Moon? Were the craters impact craters, or volcanoes?
"When we brought back samples, we learned that there haven't been volcanoes for billions of years, there hasn't been water hardly ever. What we knew about the moon changed from all sorts of things being reasonable speculation to certain things being definite fact."
The Martian meteorites have done much the same thing for knowledge of Mars, Swindle said.