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Abstract

A catalogue of citations related to possible meteorites has been assembled by searching the ancient Greek and Latin literature up to the end of the West Roman Empire (ad 476). The catalogue illustrates the attitude of ancient populations towards the fall of meteorites and extends the record of meteorite falls back in time. The citations are arranged in the catalogue as: i) ‘meteorite falls’, when both the locality and the date of the fall are, at least approximately, indicated; ii) ‘worshipped stones’, when the written and archaeological sources suggest the actual existence of a stone as an object of worship, but the information about the locality and the date of the fall are missing or vague; iii) ‘myths’, when the connexion between an object said to have fallen from the heaven and the fall of a meteorite is weak or obscured by mythological traditions.

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cover image Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Volume 2732007
Pages: 215 - 225

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Published: 2007

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Massimo D'Orazio
Dipartimento di Scienze della Terra, Università di Pisa, Via S. Maria 53, 1-56126 Pisa, Italy (e-mail: [email protected])

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Citing Literature

  • A note on the trident mark, stone worship and cult practices in Southeast Arabia, Arabian Archaeology and Epigraphy, 10.1111/aae.12255, 35, 1, (126-135), (2024).
  • Impact Structures and Meteorites in North Africa, The Geology of North Africa, 10.1007/978-3-031-48299-1_20, (591-630), (2024).
  • , The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World, 10.1093/oso/9780197648148.001.0001, (2023).
  • Cultural Geology, Cultural Biology, Cultural Taxonomy, and the Intangible Geoheritage as New Strategies for Geoconservation, Geoheritage, 10.1007/s12371-021-00603-6, 13, 3, (2021).
  • Julius Obsequens’s book, Liber Prodigiorum : A Roman era record of meteorite falls, fireballs, and other celestial phenomena , Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 10.1111/maps.13525, 55, 7, (1697-1708), (2020).

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