Skip header navigation bar Go to the page main content Go to the page main content Skip header navigation bar Go to the page main content Go to the page main content

National Aeronautics
and Space Administration

Go to the site search section + Text Only Version

+ Contact NASA
Skip the site search section
   Antarctic Meteorite Newsletter, Volume 30, No. 2 - August 2007
Volume 30, No. 2 - August 2006
Petrographic Descriptions   (Select a sample)


 
DNG 06004
GRA 06100
GRA 06101
GRA 06128
GRA 06129
GRA 06130
GRA 06131
GRA 06157
GRA 06172
GRA 06173
GRA 06189
LAP 04462
LAP 04475
LAP 04514
LAP 04516
LAP 04521
LAP 04527
LAP 04552
LAP 04565
LAP 04572
LAP 04581
LAP 04588
LAP 04592
LAP 04612
LAP 04614
LAP 04672
LAP 04675
LAP 04680
LAP 04689
LAP 04741
LAP 04745
LAP 04760
LAP 04796
LAP 04807
LAP 04809
LAP 04824
LAR 04364
LAR 04369
LAR 04380
LAR 04382
LAR 06319
LAR 06621
LAR 06638
LAR 06870
LAR 06875
LAR 06876
LAR 06877
MIL 05069
MIL 05147
RBT 04143
RBT 04251
RBT 04255
SCO 06040
SCO 06041
TYR 05181
 


Skip to the page footer Skip the navigatio links
Sample No.: MIL 05147
Location: Miller Range
Field No.: 18074
Dimensions (cm):   1.5 x 1.25 x 0.75
Weight (g): 4.850
Meteorite Type:

Iron-IIIAB



Macroscopic Description: Tim McCoy
This small (1.5 x 1.25 x 0.75 mm; 4.85 grams) sample exhibits a bluish-silver exterior reminiscent of both fusion crusted iron (e.g., San Francisco Mts.) and irons which have had the exterior removed as a result of ablation by sand or ice. Numerous large cracks are present and the meteorite has obviously split along one of these fractures, producing a planar boundary which abuts a jagged surface and together which form an indentation into an otherwise rounded specimen.

 

Thin Section (,2) Description: Tim McCoy
The longitudinal section measures ~7 x 7 mm. One end of the section is rounded and represents the original surface of the meteorite. The opposite end is truncated along a linear edge. The bulk of the meteorite is composed of kamacite with an α2 structure. The section is bounded by a weathered crust that rarely overlies small pockets of fusion crust. Inset from the straight edge of the section and parallel to it at regular spacings of ~2 mm are, first, a taenite lamellae (up to 34 wt.% Ni) ~50 µm in width which contain along its length irregular ~100 µm pockets of taenite and P-rich, Ni-rich melt (28 wt.% Ni, 11 wt.% P) in a eutectic relationship. A further ~2 mm into the meteorite is a fracture, now filled with terrestrial iron hydroxides, that includes larger grains of taenite (up to 23 wt.% Ni). The larger particles, reaching a few hundreds microns, sometimes contain oriented kamacite plates. A representative traverse yields an average composition of 7.2 wt.% Ni, 0.1 wt.% P and 0.6 wt.% Co. The meteorite is an iron and could be related to a number of groups (e.g., IIAB, IIIAB, IAB). The Ni and P concentrations might suggest group IIIAB. It is, however, unlikely that it is representative of the larger mass from which it was derived.



Thin Section Images

Reflected Light
MIL 05147
MIL05147 - Reflected LightMIL05147 - Reflected LightMIL05147 - Reflected Light



Lab Images

MIL 05147