Meteorite Powder

TL;DR. This ingredient is used as a mineral powder for texture, visual effect, and sometimes mild physical exfoliation or skin-conditioning claims. Its formulation value is mainly particulate feel, opacity, and mineral content rather than a strong bioactive role.

What does Meteorite Powder do in a cosmetic formula?

This ingredient is used as a mineral powder for texture, visual effect, and sometimes mild physical exfoliation or skin-conditioning claims. Its formulation value is mainly particulate feel, opacity, and mineral content rather than a strong bioactive role.

Is Meteorite Powder clean?

From a clean-standard lens, this ingredient is not a common restricted-list target, but documentation matters because natural mineral powders can carry trace metals and nickel sensitization concerns. It is usually assessed by particle size, respirable dust controls, and impurity specifications rather than by classic preservative or fragrance flags.

Is Meteorite Powder sustainable?

This material is a finite mineral source, usually collected or processed from recovered stony or metallic material rather than grown feedstock. It is not biodegradable in the organic sense, but it is inorganic and generally persistent as mineral particulate; sourcing traceability and dust management are the main sustainability checks.

Is Meteorite Powder COSMOS-approved?

It can be compatible with COSMOS-natural when it is a naturally occurring mineral processed only by allowed physical methods and meeting contaminant limits; it would not count as organic content. Green Chemistry alignment is partial: low-transformation processing is favorable, while finite sourcing and lack of biodegradability keep it from a strong green signal.

How does Meteorite Powder work chemically?

It is an inorganic mineral powder composed of variable silicate, oxide, and iron-nickel phases depending on the source, so supplier specifications matter more than a single fixed composition. It is essentially insoluble and pH-stable under normal cosmetic conditions, but oxidizable iron phases can affect color or odor in water-based formulas, so chelation and finished-product stability testing are useful.

Last updated 2026-05-14