Description
These Meteorites have been found by a Berber Nomad in North Africa, and are in their original ‘as found’ condition.
These meteorites are classed as gradeΒ L Chondrites, these have Low total iron contents (including 7β11% Fe-Ni metal by mass), making them show little, to no, magnetic properties. Around 46% of ordinary chondrite falls belong to this group, which makes them the most common type of meteorite to fall on Earth.
It has been demonstrated that over 300 tonnes ofΒ meteoritesΒ land on the Earth every day: needless to say, most of these never reach the attention of meteorologists. Those that do are carefully examined to establish their broad classification (chondrite, achondrite, stony iron, iron etc). Any that βshow promiseβ are scrutinised more carefully to ascertain their lithology, age, degree of weathering etc.Β
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Ultimately, the testing laboratory (The Natural History Museum in the UK) will assign a name and publish a description. The name generally refers to the region or nearest town to the location of the fall or find.
The majority of stone meteorites fall into the category of βCommon Chondriteβ. These are ancient stony objects that formed within the solar disc about 4.5 billion years ago and which are by far the most frequently discovered βspace rocksβ. Many of these are found in large βstrewnfieldsβ in the North Western Sahara. While waiting for a full examination/description, these are referred to as unclassified NWA MeteoritesΒ (North West Africa Meteorites).
SIMILAR TO SEEN:Β The image shows an example of the single specimen you will receive. This will be picked from our stock box graded and with a size within the minimum and maximum size range indicated. It will not be the exact specimen in the photo, the colours, shape, size and style may vary as with any natural item.