Shergottites
  The shergottites are named for their type specimen, an achondrite that fell
  in Shergotty, India, in 1865. Comprising 17 distinct members, they represent
  the most abundant type of Martian meteorite. Shergottites are igneous rocks of
  volcanic or plutonic origin, and they resemble terrestrial rocks more closely
  than do any other achondrite group. They all show exceptionally young
  crystallization ages of about 150 to 200 million years, and they usually
  exhibit signs of severe shock-metamorphism. Typically, the plagioclase in
  shergottites has been converted to maskelynite, a glass that is produced when
  plagioclase is subjected to shock pressures of at least 30 GPa. It is likely
  that the maskelynite was formed by the impact forces that blasted the
  shergottites from the Martian surface and into space. Calculations show that
  it requires a major impact event to accelerate any material to a speed high
  enough to escape the planet's gravity - one of the reasons why the SNC
  meteorites are such a rare class. Based upon their mineral compositions, the
  shergottites are further subdivided into two distinct subgroups: the basaltic
  subgroup, and the lherzolitic subgroup. 
   
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