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Stunning 49.4g PUNGGUR Meteorite Slice Witnessed Fall Indonesia

Top Meteorite

  • $ 5,988.00


 

 

On Offer:  Stunning and Fresh! 49.4g complete slice of the new Punggur meteorite, witnessed to fall in Indonesia in 2021. 
Dimensions: Approximately 121.7mm x 59.8mm x 2.0mm
Type: H7 Melt Breccia 
Description:  49.4 gram full slice of an utterly amazing *H melt breccia meteorite. First fall of 2021.
*This may be one of the few, and perhaps the very first recorded melt breccia witnessed fall. I cannot yet confirm this, but it seems likely.
What you get:  49.4g full slice of Punggur Impact Melt Breccia meteorite specimen as shown, & signed Certificate of Authenticity.
I offer a 100% no questions asked 30 day return policy.

SEE OFFICIAL METEORITICAL SOCIETY ENTRY BELOW
Punggur
Basic information Name: Punggur
     This is an OFFICIAL meteorite name.
Abbreviation: There is no official abbreviation for this meteorite.
Observed fall: Yes, confirmed fall
Year fell: 2021
Country: Indonesia
Mass:help 6.6 kg
Classification
  history:
Recommended:   H7-melt breccia    [explanation]

This is the only approved meteorite classified as H7-melt breccia.
Search for other: H chondrites, H chondrites (type 4-7), Melted chondrites, Ordinary chondrites, and Ordinary chondrites (type 4-7)
Comments: Approved 23 Apr 2021
Writeuphelp
Writeup from MB 110:

Punggur        5°00’22.4"S, 105°16’11.9"E

Lampung, Indonesia

Confirmed fall: 28 Jan 2021

Classification: H7-melt breccia

History: (Roberto Vargas, Mark Lyon, Elang Erlangga) At 9:53 pm local time (14:53 UTC) on 28 January 2021, residents in southern Sumatra heard loud booms that shook their houses. The sonic boom was registered by the Indonesia Tsunami Early Warning System (InaTEWS). Eyewitnesses report the bolide was traveling in a W/NW direction. A 2.2 kg stone crashed through the roof of a house in the Punggur district (Kecamatan Punggur), Central Lampung, Sumatra at 5°00’22.4"S 105°16’11.9"E. The stone embedded itself in the soil beside the house. Residents of the village submerged this mass in water, believing the water to have healing properties. That same night in neighboring Gunung Sugih village (5°0’35.1518"S 105°13’13.9019"E) a woman found a ~50 g specimen that reportedly bounced off of a nearby roof. The following morning three additional masses were found: a 138 g mass that crashed through a roof and landed on a bed (4°59’46.6"S 105°14’47.6"E); a ~1700 g mass in a flooded hole in a rice paddy (4°59’56.2254"S 105°15’23.3518"E); and, a 2511 g mass was recovered from a rice paddy (4°59’50.3722"S 105°15’13.7405"E). Pieces from the ~1700 g mass were used for the classification. Further fall information and photos are found at karmaka.de.

Physical characteristics: Five stones were recovered - 2511 g, 2200 g (the first stone), ~1700 g, 138 g, and 50 g. The stones are angular to blocky, exhibit a few shallow regmaglypts, and covered with thick matte to shiny fusion crust.

Petrography: (L. Garvie, ASU) Based on an 8 × 7 cm slice and 1.6 × 1.4 cm probe mount. The interior of a fresh cut stone shows a visually appealing panorama dominated by a light-grey, crystalline, matrix hosting clasts with abundant small metal grains and separated by anastomosing network of mm- to cm-sized metal and coarse-grained silicates. Most silicates are clear and transparent. The 8 × 7 cm slice has 15 areal% metal+sulfide. Breccia clast: The largest breccia clast (3 × 2 cm) is rounded and contains a uniform scattering of anhedral metal (grain sizes 50 to 750 μm) and subordinate troilite (to 300 microns), and 7.1 areal% metal and 3.6 areal% troilite. Kamacite and troilite grains are single crystal and lack shock features. Feldspar is anhedral and to 300 μm across. Olivine (often containing scattered 1-to-5-micron-sized spheres of metal and sulfide), and pyroxene to 0.5 mm. Metal grains dominated by single crystal kamacite, some with taenite rims and lath martensite cores. Minor chromite to 300 μm. Rare Ca-Na-Mg phosphate to 150 microns. One 10-μm-sized native Cu grain. Interbreccia material: Coarse-grained, with olivine to 1 mm, pyroxene to 0.75 mm. Feldspar to 0.5 mm, but larger interconnected masses to several mm occur. The feldspar poikilitically encloses rounded pyroxene and olivine chadacrysts. Metal anhedral, mm and occasionally to 2 cm in length, sinuous with scalloped outlines. Single-crystal kamacite dominates with subordinate taenite.

Geochemistry: Olivine, Fa19.9±0.3, FeO/MnO=40.0±2.3 (n=18); low Ca pyroxene Fs17.3±0.1Wo2.5±0.4 (Fs1.3-7.0), FeO/MnO=23.5±1.2 (n=11); high Ca pyroxene Fs7.5Wo43.1 (n=1); Feldspar - limited data suggests two compositional populations, Ab83.6±0.6An9.6±0.8 (n=4) and Ab77.0±0.6An20.1±0.7 (n=2); kamacite Ni 6.7±0.2 wt%, Co 0.5±0.05 wt% (n=8) ; and taenite with 23 to 35 wt% Ni (n=8).

Classification: H7-melt breccia. The Fa, Fs, and Co concentration in kamacite are consistent with an H chondrite. The rock is coarse grained, but lacks a clear igneous texture, and the lack of relict chondrules and Wo content of orthopyroxene indicate a type 7.. The brecciated nature and extensive metal veining are consistent with a melt breccia. The absence of Neuman bands in the kamacite, and single-crystal troilite lacking shock lamellae is indicative of a low meteorite with low shock. W0.

Specimens: Mark Lyon, Roberto Vargas, and Norman Lebron Jr acquired the ~1700 g and 2511 g main masses. The 2200 g and 138 g stones with Jay Piatek. ASU, 21 g.

Data from:
  MB110
  Table 0
  Line 0:
State/Prov/County: Lampung
Date: 28 Jan 2021
Latitude: 5°00'22.4"S
Longitude: 105°16'11.9"E
Mass (g): 6599
Pieces: 5
Class: H7-melt breccia
Shock stage: low
Weathering grade: W0
Fayalite (mol%): 19.9±0.3
Ferrosilite (mol%): 17.3±0.1
Wollastonite (mol%): 2.5±0.4
Classifier: L. Garvie, ASU
Type spec mass (g): 21
Type spec location: ASU
Main mass: Mark Lyon, Roberto Vargas, Norman Lebron Jr, and Jay Piatek
Comments: Submitted by L. Garvie


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