A meteoroid is a small rock that zooms around outer space. When the meteoroid zips into the Earth’s atmosphere, it’s now called a meteor or “shooting star”. If the rock doesn’t vaporize en route, it’s called a meteorite as soon as it whacks into the ground. The word meteor comes from the Greek word for “high in the air.”

Meteorites are black, heavy (almost twice the normal rock density), and magnetic. However, there is an Earth-made rock that is also black, heavy, and magnetic (magnetite) that is not a meteorite. To tell the difference, scratch a line from both rocks onto an unglazed tile (or the bottom of a coffee mug or the underside of the toilet tank). Magnetite will leave a mark, whereas the real meteorite will not.

If you find a meteorite, head to your nearest geology department at a local university or college and let them know what you’ve found. In the USA, if you find a meteorite, you get to keep it… but you might want to let the experts in the geology department have a thin slice of it to see what they can figure out about your particular specimen.