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"In 1970 I found little difficulty staying 30 years ahead of the man in the street, and now I find it difficult to stay 18 months ahead of the man on the street."
- Vernor Vinge

Ultra-Terrene  
  Originating from some world other than Earth.  

The prefix "ultra" comes from the Latin meaning "beyond" and "terrene" again from the Latin for "earth".

This is a very early use of this expression, maybe the first.

Godfrey Stilton, professor of astronomy at the University of California, also on the committee, might have been chosen as the very antithesis of Gaillard in his views and tendencies. Narrow, dogmatic, skeptical of all that could not be proved by line and rule, scornful of all that lay beyond the bourn of a strait empiricism, he was loath to admit the ultra-terrene origin of the vessel, or even the possibility of organic life on any other world than the earth.
Technovelgy from An Adventure in Futurity, by Clark Ashton Smith.
Published by Wonder Stories in 1931
Additional resources -

I'm not sure that other writers every really picked up on ultra-terrene; a lot of Smith's stories use this expression. Here's an excerpt from Master of the Asteroid (1932):

In later years, with the progress of exploration, more than one of the early derelicts has been descried, following a solitary orbit; and the wrecks of others have been found on ultra-terrene shores.

This phrase is entirely different from "contra-terrene" which is sometimes abbreviated as CT or "see-tee", and refers to antimatter. See the article for seetee blinker in Collision Orbit by Jack Williamson.

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Additional resources:
  More Ideas and Technology from An Adventure in Futurity
  More Ideas and Technology by Clark Ashton Smith
  Tech news articles related to An Adventure in Futurity
  Tech news articles related to works by Clark Ashton Smith

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