[meteorite-list] AD: Special - NWA 7603, Enstatite Achondrite

2015-04-23 Thread Stefan Ralew via Meteorite-list

Dear List Members,

today I would like to continue to present some extremely rare and exotic 
meteorites.


NWA 7603, an enstatite achondrite with a Tkw of only 126 g.

Enstatite achondrites are a extremely rare class of meteorites with only 6 
approved meteorites of this type listed in the Meteoritical Bulletin. The 
total weight of all 6 enstatite achondrites together is less than 1 kg, they 
are thus rarer than meteorites from Mars and the Moon!

In the Meteoritical Bulletin they are described as followed:
„An enstatite-rich achondrite that has not yet been classified into a 
group."


NWA 7603 is a very beautiful meteorite, it is a hard rock which can be 
polished very well. Iron metal is well preserved and visible.
The following pieces is all that is available of NWA 7603. Please take a 
look under the following link if your are interested.

http://www.sr-meteorites.de/specials/nwa7603/nwa7603.html

If you have any questions, please don´t hesitate to contact me.
i...@meteoriten.com

In the coming weeks I will present some more amazing meteorites at this 
place, don´t miss the opportunity to aquire some very exotic meteorites for 
your collection! Thank you for looking!


Best wishes,
Stefan

SR-Meteorites
www.sr-meteorites.de 



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[meteorite-list] Dating the moon-forming impact event with meteorites

2015-04-23 Thread Shawn Alan via Meteorite-list
Hello Listers

Enjoy

PS I have this issue on PDF

Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633 
ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
Website http://meteoritefalls.com 


MOON DAILY
Dating the moon-forming impact event with meteorites
 by Staff Writers
 Tucson AZ (SPX) Apr 22, 2015

"Through a combination of data analysis and numerical modeling work,
researchers have found a record of the ancient Moon-forming giant impact
observable in stony meteorites. Their work will appear in the April 2015
issue of the Journal Science.

The work was done by NASA Solar System Exploration Research Virtual
Institute (SSERVI) researchers led by Principal Investigator Bill Bottke
of the Institute for the Science of Exploration Targets (ISET) team at
the Southwest Research Institute and included Tim Swindle, director of
the University of Arizona's Lunar and Planetary Laboratory.

The inner Solar System's biggest known collision was the Moon-forming
giant impact between a large protoplanet and the proto-Earth. The timing
of this giant impact, however, is uncertain, with the ages of the most
ancient lunar samples returned by the Apollo astronauts still being
debated.

Numerical simulations of the giant impact indicate this event not only
created a disk of debris near Earth that formed the Moon, but it also
ejected huge amounts of debris completely out of the Earth-Moon system.

The fate of this material, comprising as much as several percent of an
Earth mass, has not been closely examined until recently. However, it is
likely some of it blasted main belt asteroids, with a record plausibly
left behind in their near-surface rocks. Collisions on these asteroids
in more recent times delivered these shocked remnants to Earth, which
scientists have now used to date the age of the Moon.

The research indicates numerous kilometer-sized fragments from the giant
impact struck main belt asteroids at much higher velocities than typical
main belt collisions, heating the surface and leaving behind a permanent
record of the impact event.

Evidence that the giant impact produced a large number of
kilometer-sized fragments can be inferred from laboratory and numerical
impact experiments, the ancient lunar impact record itself, and the
numbers and sizes of fragments produced by major main belt asteroid
collisions.

Once the team concluded that pieces of the Moon-forming impact hit main
belt asteroids and left a record of shock heating events in some
meteorites, they set out to deduce both the timing and the relative
magnitude of the bombardment.

By modeling the evolution of giant impact debris over time and fitting
the results to ancient impact heat signatures in stony meteorites, the
team was able to infer the Moon formed about 4.47 billion years ago, in
agreement with many previous estimates. The most ancient Solar System
materials found in meteorites are about one hundred million years older
than this age."

Source:
http://www.moondaily.com/reports/Dating_the_moon_forming_impact_event_with_meteorites_999.html
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[meteorite-list] Japan Meteor 0334 JST 22APR2015

2015-04-23 Thread drtanuki via Meteorite-list
List,
Japan Meteor 0334 JST 22APR2015 
- 2015年4月22日03時34分07秒こと座流星群の火球 
5 camera captures! Ended over land.
http://lunarmeteoritehunters.blogspot.jp/2015/04/japan-meteor-22apr2015-2015422033407.html

Dirk Ross...Tokyo
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[meteorite-list] Meteorite Picture of the Day

2015-04-23 Thread Paul Swartz via Meteorite-list
Today's Meteorite Picture of the Day: Allende

Contributed by: James Tobin

http://www.tucsonmeteorites.com/mpodmain.asp?DD=04/23/2015
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