Meteorites: Where Earth and Sky Converge — A Reflection on the Wider Cosmos
Meteorites blur the boundary between Earth and space — reminders that our world is not separate from the wider cosmos, but continuous with it. Each one is a fragment of celestial history, shaped by forces beyond imagination yet held effortlessly in the human hand.
A lunar meteorite, hurled from the Moon by ancient impact, speaks of exile and return — matter displaced across millions of kilometers to find its resting place here. A pallasite, its olivine gems suspended in metal, captures beauty born of collision: a window into the molten hearts of shattered worlds. An oriented chondrite, its flight lines etched by descent, preserves the memory of motion through fire. And a Campo del Cielo iron, its sculpted regmaglypts like ripples in sand, bears witness to endurance itself.
Meteorites stretch both time and space, placing our brief lifetimes in profound perspective. They make the vastness of the universe palpable — not as abstraction, but as presence. In holding one, we encounter something that predates continents, that once drifted through the dark between worlds. The experience invites awe, connection, and humility all at once: a quiet reminder that we, too, are made of cosmic matter, still in motion.
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