We should always keep an eye out for meteorites that have unusual 
characteristics.  

That said, I believe there is one fatal flaw in the calculations of the poster 
paper.

"it is the only planet where impact speeds routinely range from 5—20 times the 
planet's escape speed; this causes impact ejecta to leave its surface moving 
many times faster than needed to escape its gravitational pull. Thus, a large 
fraction of mercurian ejecta may reach heliocentric orbit with speeds 
sufficiently high for Earth­ crossing orbits to exist immediately after impact, 
resulting in larger fractions of the ejecta reaching Earth as meteorites."

Read carefully, the fatal flaw is that for impact speeds that high, nearly 
everything is vaporized, or turned to dust.  The conundrum, is that the 
impactor must shock, or transfer energy to the Mercurian rocks fast enough to 
eject them, but not so fast as to vaporize or crush them.

I think that brings us back to square one.  ie, Mercurian meteorites are very 
unlikely, but not impossible.

Mike Fowler
Chicago


> At 11:07 AM 8/4/2011, Edwin Thompson wrote: 
> 
> 
>> A very compelling poster was presented at a Met Soc meeting back in 
> 
>> the 90's showing a very plausible scenario that might have produced 
> 
>> meteorites on Earth having come from the surface of Mercury. 
> 
> 
> Brett Gladman and Jaime Coffey from the University of British 
> Columbia discussed the possibility of meteorites originating from 
> Mercury in a 2009 paper from Meteoritics and Planetary Science. A 
> prepublication copy is available online: 
> 
> http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/0801/0801.4038.pdf 
> 
> They concluded that there should be a number of meteorites of 
> Mercurian origin already here -- around 1/3 to 1/2 the number which 
> originated from Mars. 
> 
> The Messenger spacecraft should provide better information about the 
> possible composition of Mercurian meteorites. 
> 
> David Weir offers a useful summary of the subject of Mercurian meteorites at: 
> 
> http://www.meteoritestudies.com/protected_MERCURY.HTM 
> 
> 
> -- Philip R. "Pib" Burns 
> pib at pibburns.com 
> http://www.pibburns.com/ 

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