Thousands; perhaps tens of thousands. It varies, of course. When the Earth passes through the path of an old comet, we have a "meteor shower", but even during normal times there are a very large number.
Most of them are the size of a grain of sand, and a "big" one can be as big as a grain of rice; perhaps even as big as a corn kernel. There are the rare giant meteors, of a few inches or even a few yards in diameter, that come along a few times a year, and VERY rarely, something big enough to punch through the atmosphere and do some major damage. For example, i 1908 a meteorite struck Siberia near the village of Tunguska, and caused an explosion as powerful as a nuclear bomb. It leveled miles of forests, and caused fires; the explosion was heard a thousand miles away!
Iron meteorites account for about 5% of all meteorites that fall to earth, they are likely to be either Kamacite or Taenite. The density of these minerals is 7.9 and 7.8-8.22 g/cm3 respectively.
Meteorites are material from outer space that have landed on the surface of a planet.
Meteorites are up to 10 meters in diameter. Anything larger is called an asteroid. The "average" depends how you choose to define "average"; most meteorites roughly have the size of a grain of sand - only a tiny percentage has a size of several meters.
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made from rocky materials
Many thousands of them, possibly millions, fall every day.
Gravity
well everytime you smash a orb one lands so when there are no more orbs there will be no more meteorites
Do merteors fall on fall on earth surface
Meteorites fall into two classes, stony and iron. There is a belt of meteoric material near Mars, from which many of our meteorites come. Perhaps the debris from a broken planet? The iron meteorites, in fact iron-nickel mixtures, are magnetic. the stony meteorites are not. Have a look for Bode's Law in a reference source.
everywhere. because meteorites contain iron atoms. and meteorites fall anywhere in the world
No. Meteorites fall at the same rate over all places on Earth. However, meteorites are easier to find in Antarctica as they are easy to spot on top of the ice sheet. In most other places meteorites don't stand out much and are easily mistaken for ordinary rocks.
More than 100,000 meteorites fall to Earth every day. Providing the exact number is all but impossible, as most meteorites have the size of a grain of salt and very few -- if any -- are more than a couple of centimeters/inches of diameter. This means most of them are barely noticeable. However, some extrapolations can be made: if every day 100,000 meteorites fall to Earth, for the sake of simplicity, we could infer that all of them fall homogeneously to the ground. With that in mind, Mexico represents approximately 1% of the planet's surface, so every day 1,000 meteorites would fall through Mexico's air space. This means in turn, that some 365,000 meteorites fall to Mexico every year.
Meteorites can fall anywhere on Earth. So, yes, there are likely meteorites to be found in Florida. They look very similar to normal rocks, but they have elements in them not commonly found on Earth.
Because they are lighter.
No. Meteorites fall very quickly and suddently with no advance warning.
Meteorites fall to earth in many locations, including Antarctica. In hunting meteorites in Antarctica, which takes place during the summer months when there are no sunsets, the meteorites (composed mostly of iron) retain heat and may, therefore, be located more easily in an ice sheet. However, in some areas the meteorites are mixed with moraine and other rocks, so identifying them can be more difficult. Read more, below.