Showing 19–36 of 51 results

Djoua 001 #20 Aubrite (paired) – 5.5 g

156,95 $

Djoua 001 is an Aubrite meteorite discovered in Algeria in 2021.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

A new theory by a French scientific team raises the possibility of a link between Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

 

 

 

Out of stock

Sebkha el Melah 001 #2 Aubrite – 66,2 g

2.083,18 $

Sebkha el Melah 001 is a non brecciated Aubrite meteorite, discovered in Mali in 2022 in the region of Wad Alhath.

To date only 78 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

This aubrite has one of the highest enstatite abundances ever reported (~98%). The enstatite, diopside and forsterite in this meteorite have some of the lowest iron contents (below the electron microprobe detection limits for major elements) ever documented in an Aubrite.

Out of stock

Sebkha el Melah 001 #1 Aubrite – 31,8 g

1.001,16 $

Sebkha el Melah 001 is a non brecciated Aubrite meteorite, discovered in Mali in 2022 in the region of Wad Alhath.

To date only 78 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

This aubrite has one of the highest enstatite abundances ever reported (~98%). The enstatite, diopside and forsterite in this meteorite have some of the lowest iron contents (below the electron microprobe detection limits for major elements) ever documented in an Aubrite.

Out of stock

Tiglit #14 Aubrite – 0,03 g

11,89 $

Tiglit is a rare aubrite that fell in Morocco on December 10, 2021.

The first specimens or samples collected without scientific data have reached exorbitant prices up to 600 euros per gram, marketed as a lunar meteorite. Professor Abderrahmane Ibhi, expert in meteorites and founder responsible for the University Museum of Meteorites, confirmed the authenticity of the news of the fall of a meteorite in the south-east of Morocco near the village of Tiglit and indicated that the analyses carried out by the University Museum of Meteorites confirm that it is indeed a celestial rock of the aubrite type of asteroidal origin thus calming down some of the hunters of meteorites who thought that they had made a fortune.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

 

Out of stock

Tiglit #13 Aubrite – 0,06 g

19,02 $

Tiglit is a rare aubrite that fell in Morocco on December 10, 2021.

The first specimens or samples collected without scientific data have reached exorbitant prices up to 600 euros per gram, marketed as a lunar meteorite. Professor Abderrahmane Ibhi, expert in meteorites and founder responsible for the University Museum of Meteorites, confirmed the authenticity of the news of the fall of a meteorite in the south-east of Morocco near the village of Tiglit and indicated that the analyses carried out by the University Museum of Meteorites confirm that it is indeed a celestial rock of the aubrite type of asteroidal origin thus calming down some of the hunters of meteorites who thought that they had made a fortune.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

 

Out of stock

Tiglit #12 Aubrite – 0,09 g

26,16 $

Tiglit is a rare aubrite that fell in Morocco on December 10, 2021.

The first specimens or samples collected without scientific data have reached exorbitant prices up to 600 euros per gram, marketed as a lunar meteorite. Professor Abderrahmane Ibhi, expert in meteorites and founder responsible for the University Museum of Meteorites, confirmed the authenticity of the news of the fall of a meteorite in the south-east of Morocco near the village of Tiglit and indicated that the analyses carried out by the University Museum of Meteorites confirm that it is indeed a celestial rock of the aubrite type of asteroidal origin thus calming down some of the hunters of meteorites who thought that they had made a fortune.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

 

Out of stock

Tiglit #11 Aubrite – 0,10 g

28,54 $

Tiglit is a rare aubrite that fell in Morocco on December 10, 2021.

The first specimens or samples collected without scientific data have reached exorbitant prices up to 600 euros per gram, marketed as a lunar meteorite. Professor Abderrahmane Ibhi, expert in meteorites and founder responsible for the University Museum of Meteorites, confirmed the authenticity of the news of the fall of a meteorite in the south-east of Morocco near the village of Tiglit and indicated that the analyses carried out by the University Museum of Meteorites confirm that it is indeed a celestial rock of the aubrite type of asteroidal origin thus calming down some of the hunters of meteorites who thought that they had made a fortune.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

 

Out of stock

Tiglit #10 Aubrite – 0,12 g

34,48 $

Tiglit is a rare aubrite that fell in Morocco on December 10, 2021.

The first specimens or samples collected without scientific data have reached exorbitant prices up to 600 euros per gram, marketed as a lunar meteorite. Professor Abderrahmane Ibhi, expert in meteorites and founder responsible for the University Museum of Meteorites, confirmed the authenticity of the news of the fall of a meteorite in the south-east of Morocco near the village of Tiglit and indicated that the analyses carried out by the University Museum of Meteorites confirm that it is indeed a celestial rock of the aubrite type of asteroidal origin thus calming down some of the hunters of meteorites who thought that they had made a fortune.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in France at Aubres in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

 

Jdiriya 005 #7 Aubrite – 1 g

59,45 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Jdiriya 005 #6 Aubrite – 0.9 g

53,51 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Out of stock

Jdiriya 005 #5 Aubrite – 1,3 g

77,29 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Out of stock

Jdiriya 005 #4 Aubrite – 4,3 g

255,64 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Out of stock

Jdiriya 005 #3 Aubrite – 4,7 g

279,42 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Jdiriya 005 #2 Aubrite – 3,9 g

231,86 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Out of stock

Jdiriya 005 #1 Aubrite – 3,1 g

184,30 $

Jdiriya 005 is an Aubrite meteorite of only 35.6 grams, discovered by Brahim Ikken in 2018 in Morocco.

A new theory carried by a French scientific team talks about the possibility of a link between the Aubrites and the planet Mercury.

To date only 76 such meteorites have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

Writeup from MB 111:

Jdiriya 005 27°33’23.45″N, 10°31’29.87″W

Saguia el Hamra, Western Sahara

Find: 2018

Classification: Enstatite achondrite (Aubrite)

History: Found by Brahim Ikken in 2018. Bought By Jean Redelsperger from Mohamed Elguirah in 2021.

Physical characteristics: Several irregular dark pieces.

Petrography: (J. Gattacceca, B. Devouard, CEREGE) Coarse-grained unbrecciated rock with granular texture made up primarily of enstatite (61 vol%) with typical grain size 5mm. No relict chondrules are observed. Other silicates are sodic plagioclase (3.6 vol%) with typical gain size 700 μm, and Si-rich glass. Opaque minerals (35 vol%), under the form of mm sized rounded grains, are all weathered except Zn-rich daubreelite that makes up 0.2 vol% of the meteorite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite Fs0.3±0.2Wo0.6±0.1, CaO 0.33±0.06 (n=6). Plagioclase An6.7±0.1Ab89.7±0.1Or3.6±0.1 (n=3). Daubréelite contains up to 6 wt% Zn.

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: Type specimen at CEREGE. Main mass with Jean Redelsperger.

 

Nwa 13512 #6 Aubrite – 10,8 g

770,50 $

Nwa 13512 is an Aubrite meteorite discovered in Morocco near Boudnib in 2019.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

History : Three visually-similar specimens (total weight 105 g)

found together near Boudnib, Morocco were purchased by Mohammed Hmani in December 2019.

Petrography: (A. Irving, UWS and P. Carpenter, WUSL) The specimen has a mean grainsize of ~400 µm and is composed predominantly of equant grains of enstatite with subordinate sodic plagioclase and accessory altered Si-bearing kamacite, altered Cr-troilite and schreibersite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite (Fs0.2±0.0Wo0.6-0.7, N = 3), plagioclase (Ab91.4An2.6Or6.0; Ab76.4An21.4Or2.3; N = 2), kamacite (Si = 1.5 wt.%, Ni = 7.9 wt.%).

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: 20.5 g including one polished thin section at UWB; remainder with Mr. M. Hmani.

 

Nwa 13512 #5 Aubrite – 2,8 g

233,05 $

Nwa 13512 is an Aubrite meteorite discovered in Morocco near Boudnib in 2019.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

History : Three visually-similar specimens (total weight 105 g)

found together near Boudnib, Morocco were purchased by Mohammed Hmani in December 2019.

Petrography: (A. Irving, UWS and P. Carpenter, WUSL) The specimen has a mean grainsize of ~400 µm and is composed predominantly of equant grains of enstatite with subordinate sodic plagioclase and accessory altered Si-bearing kamacite, altered Cr-troilite and schreibersite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite (Fs0.2±0.0Wo0.6-0.7, N = 3), plagioclase (Ab91.4An2.6Or6.0; Ab76.4An21.4Or2.3; N = 2), kamacite (Si = 1.5 wt.%, Ni = 7.9 wt.%).

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: 20.5 g including one polished thin section at UWB; remainder with Mr. M. Hmani.

 

Out of stock

Nwa 13512 #4 Aubrite – 2,7 g

224,72 $

Nwa 13512 is an Aubrite meteorite discovered in Morocco near Boudnib in 2019.

I this date only 72 meteorites of this type have been classified.

It is a rare type of meteorite, difficult to find on the market.

The name Aubrites is linked to the fall of a meteorite in Aubres, France in 1836. They are composed mainly of orthopyroxene to enstatite.

History : Three visually-similar specimens (total weight 105 g)

found together near Boudnib, Morocco were purchased by Mohammed Hmani in December 2019.

Petrography: (A. Irving, UWS and P. Carpenter, WUSL) The specimen has a mean grainsize of ~400 µm and is composed predominantly of equant grains of enstatite with subordinate sodic plagioclase and accessory altered Si-bearing kamacite, altered Cr-troilite and schreibersite.

Geochemistry: Enstatite (Fs0.2±0.0Wo0.6-0.7, N = 3), plagioclase (Ab91.4An2.6Or6.0; Ab76.4An21.4Or2.3; N = 2), kamacite (Si = 1.5 wt.%, Ni = 7.9 wt.%).

Classification: Aubrite.

Specimens: 20.5 g including one polished thin section at UWB; remainder with Mr. M. Hmani.