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  2. List of fictional elements, materials, isotopes and subatomic ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_elements...

    Extraterrestrial element found in meteorites. The German research team Group 935 discovers it in northern France in 1918 where zombified Christian knights infect the research team. Seen throughout the 'Zombies' storyline, it powers energy weapons, zombifies (and in some cases mutates) humans, increases the abilities of humans, can bend time and ...

  3. Final Fantasy XI - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Fantasy_XI

    Final Fantasy XI is a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG), and differs from previous titles in the series in several ways. Unlike the predefined main characters of previous Final Fantasy titles, players are able to customize their characters in limited ways, including selecting from one of five races and choosing their gender, facial style, hair color, body size, job, and ...

  4. List of meteorite minerals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_meteorite_minerals

    A meteorite mineral is a mineral found chiefly or exclusively within meteorites or meteorite-derived material. [ citation needed ] This is a list of those minerals, excluding minerals also commonly found in terrestrial rocks.

  5. Iron meteorite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_meteorite

    Iron meteorites, also called siderites or ferrous meteorites, are a type of meteorite that consist overwhelmingly of an iron–nickel alloy known as meteoric iron that usually consists of two mineral phases: kamacite and taenite. Most iron meteorites originate from cores of planetesimals, [3] with the exception of the IIE iron meteorite group. [4]

  6. Nonmagmatic meteorite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonmagmatic_meteorite

    Nonmagmatic meteorite (also nonmagmatic iron meteorite) is a deprecated term formerly used in meteoritics to describe iron meteorites that were originally thought to have not formed by igneous processes, to differentiate them from the magmatic meteorites, produced by the crystallization of a metal melt. [1]

  7. Meteorite shock stage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meteorite_shock_stage

    Shock stationed clay mineral from the Puchezh-Katunsky meteorite crater. Meteorite shock stage is a measure of the degree of fracturing of the matrix of a common chondrite meteorite. [1] Impacts on the parent body of a meteoroid can produce very large pressures. These pressures heat, melt and deform the rocks. This is called shock metamorphism ...

  8. Aubrite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aubrite

    Aubrites are a group of meteorites named for Aubres, [1] a small achondrite meteorite that fell in 1836 in Aubres near Nyons, France. They are primarily composed of the orthopyroxene enstatite and are often called enstatite achondrites. Their igneous origin separates them from primitive enstatite achondrites and means they originated in an ...

  9. Silicon carbide - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silicon_carbide

    While rare on Earth, silicon carbide is remarkably common in space. It is a common form of stardust found around carbon-rich stars, and examples of this stardust have been found in pristine condition in primitive (unaltered) meteorites. The silicon carbide found in space and in meteorites is almost exclusively the beta-polymorph.