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Answer for the clue "Rock from outer space ", 9 letters:
meteorite

Alternative clues for the word meteorite

Word definitions for meteorite in dictionaries

Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary Word definitions in Douglas Harper's Etymology Dictionary
"rock that falls to earth, after streaking across the sky as a meteor," 1818, from meteor + -ite .

Wikipedia Word definitions in Wikipedia
" Meteorite " is a song by American singer and songwriter Mariah Carey from her fourteenth studio album, Me. I Am Mariah... The Elusive Chanteuse (2014). It was composed by Carey and Q-Tip . A disco track, it contains a sample of the recording " Goin' Up ...

Usage examples of meteorite.

Of particular interest are the breccias, which are broken fragments of meteorites that smashed into the Moon and broke up only to be compressed and cemented together with pre-existing Moon material, forming new rocks, the breccias, millions of years later.

Buckminster-fullerenes, more commonly called buckyballs, on meteorites.

Naturally occurring buckyballs had been found in the location of meteorite craters.

The Exploratorium has only a small piece because Martian meteorites are among the rarest rocks on Earth.

I discovered that the exoskeleton was an organic-inorganic matrix composed of carbon compounds and silicate minerals, primarily olivine, pyroxene, and magnetite, substances commonly found in meteorites.

Look at how swiftly this area was reinhabited after the meteorite had killed everybody in it.

It seemed to him that the object was falling too slowly to be a meteorite, but what did he know about representative intraatmospheric velocities of terminal substellar objects?

That freak meteorite need not lie there unsmelted for another seventy years.

There were still some meteorites coming in, making bright little winks of fire where they bit into the plain.

This indicates that the Terran archaea may have arrived on Earth in the SNC meteorites.

Nora saw an astonishing range of objects: mounted skeletons, fossils, glass-fronted cabinets full of wondrous and terrible artifacts, gems, skulls, meteorites, iridescent beetles.

Like tin, iron differs from copper and gold in never being found free in nature, except as the very rare meteorites that fall to earth.

Earth continued to be pelted relentlessly by comets, meteorites, and other galactic debris, which brought water to fill the oceans and the components necessary for the successful formation of life.

Yet both of them were speaking learnedly of meteors, prissily drawing the distinction between meteor and meteorite, smothering any anxiety in a torrent of comforting verbiage.

The dilemma appeared minor when compared to the overall scope of the meteorite, and yet, as an intel analyst, Rachel had witnessed the collapse of entire theories based on smaller snags than this.