ASU Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies

ASU Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies

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Official page of the ASU Center for Meteorite Studies. Our mission is to create and share new knowledge in the field of meteoritics and allied disciplines

The Center for Meteorite Studies is home to the world's largest university-based meteorite collection. We house over 40,000 individual specimens representing more than 2,000 distinct meteorite falls and finds, and our collection is actively used for geological, planetary, and space science research at ASU and throughout the world. At the Center for Meteorite Studies, we continually pursue new know

04/24/2026

BCMS brought Moon, Mars, and meteorite joy to Capitol Hill for the NASA Science Showcase in 4/21. Graduate student Anna Kulenguski discusses how sample science is important for planetary defense, research on resources for space exploration and planet formation in our solar system and beyond.

03/20/2026

Meteoriticists listen up: we're hiring!
We have an opening for BCMS Deputy Director/ Research Professor with a negotiable start date as early as mid-May.
https://apply.interfolio.com/182090

Photos from ASU Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies's post 03/17/2026

Congratulations to our 2026 Nininger Student Travel Award Winners!

09/21/2025

Congratulations Taylor!

🎉 Congratulations to Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering student Taylor Davis, who was honored with the NASA - National Aeronautics and Space Administration's Future Investigators in NASA Earth and Space Science and Technology Award for her research on an innovative upscaling model to estimate the strength and elasticity of chondrite meteorites using nano-and micro-scale mechanical measurements.

"Taylor is tackling one of the biggest challenges in meteoritics with a bold new approach that could reshape how we understand — and prepare for — asteroid impacts," says Christian Hoover, an associate professor at the ASU School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment. "This is a game-changer. Most meteorites arrive on Earth as small fragments, making traditional strength testing at the centimeter scale either impossible or destructive."

Hoover and School of Earth and Space Exploration at ASU Research Professor Laurence Garvie with ASU Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies co-supervise Davis' interdisciplinary work that blends mechanics with astromaterials.

"I am developing a minimally destructive method to connect small-scale, or nanoscale, hardness measurements to larger-scale meteorite strength using the concept of friability, or how easily material crumbles and loses mass," says Davis, who is pursuing her doctorate in civil engineering at the ASU School of Sustainable Engineering and the Built Environment.

"This work will help predict how asteroids fragment, re-accumulate and evolve after impacts, improving models of asteroid dynamics and contributing to planetary defense strategies," Davis says. "Both mechanical properties and friability of meteorites are less than thoroughly understood in planetary science, and thus this work aims to fill a knowledge gap that currently exists in this field." 🚀 🪨

Photos from Mission To Psyche's post 07/23/2025

Meteorites are the gateway rocks for space exploration! Way to go Psyche team!

Photos from ASU Buseck Center for Meteorite Studies's post 07/17/2025

A few treasures from the Western Australian Muaeum warehouse. Look at that Benncubben!

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Location

Address


781 E Terrace Road
Tempe, AZ
85287

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm