Meteorite petrology versus genetics: Toward a unified binominal classification
Emmanuel Jacquet

TL;DR
The paper proposes a new binominal classification system for meteorites that separates petrography from genetic groups, aiming for clearer, more consistent taxonomy across the meteorite spectrum.
Contribution
It introduces a two-dimensional classification combining petrographically defined classes with genetic groups, improving clarity and consistency in meteorite taxonomy.
Findings
Proposes binominal classification with class and group
Enhances standardization for unusual meteorites
Facilitates systematic treatment of lithology and origins
Abstract
The current meteorite taxonomy, a result of two centuries of meteorite research and tradition, entangles textural and genetic terms in a less than consistent fashion, with some taxa (like shergottites) representing varied lithologies from a single putative parent body while others (like pallasites) subsume texturally similar objects of multifarious solar system origins. The familiar concept of group as representative of one primary parent body is also difficult to define empirically. It is proposed that the classification becomes explicitly binominal throughout the meteorite spectrum, with classes referring to petrographically defined primary rock types, whereas groups retain a genetic meaning, but no longer tied to any assumption on the number of represented parent bodies. The classification of a meteorite would thus involve both a class and a group, in a two-dimensional fashion…
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