“…Three decades ago, hot desert meteorites derived mainly from Australia (Bevan & Binns, 1989), Northern Africa (Aboulahris et al., 2019; Bischoff & Geiger, 1995; Ouazaa et al., 2009; Schlüter et al., 2002), and the Southwestern United States (Hutson et al., 2013; Kring et al., 2001; Rubin et al., 2000; Zolensky et al., 1990). More recent expeditions in the Arabian Peninsula (Hezel et al., 2011; Hofmann et al., 2018), Northern and Western China (Fan et al., 2022), Lut Desert (Pourkhorsandi et al., 2019), and the Atacama Desert (Gattacceca et al., 2011; Hutzler et al., 2016) have allowed the characterization of an extensive set of new DCAs. These new DCA studies are useful to constrain (i) the flux of extraterrestrial material to Earth over time (Drouard et al., 2019), (ii) the statistics of number and mass of meteorites at continental scale (Acevedo et al., 2014; Ouknine et al., 2019), and (iii) the paleoclimatic conditions of the areas from which meteorites have been recovered (Bland et al., 2006).…”