Showing 487–504 of 1197 results

Wad al Fayda 001 #15 CR2 – 2,1 g

43,99 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Out of stock

Wad al Fayda 001 #14 CR2 – 1 g

20,21 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Wad al Fayda 001 #13 CR2 – 2,5 g

49,94 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Wad al Fayda 001 #12 CR2 – 1,6 g

33,29 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Wad al Fayda 001 #11 CR2 – 1,7 g

35,68 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Wad al Fayda 001 #10 CR2 – 4,5 g

95,12 $

Wad al Fayda 001 was discovered in 2018 by Lahsen Oussalah in the Western Sahara between Guelta Zemour and Oum Dreyga.

Scientific analysis conducted by Anthony Love determined that it is a CR2 type carbonaceous meteorite.

The price of this type of meteorite has decreased significantly, since in 2001 it could go up to 200 dollars per gram.

It is a rare type of meteorite on the market.
Comes with certificate.

 

Out of stock

Trinitite #13 – 1,1 g

39,24 $

Trinitite is a glass made during the first nuclear explosion called Trinity, in Alamogordo, New Mexico on July 16, 1945.

Trinitite is made from the vitrification of the desert sand linked to the different elements of the structure on which the bomb rested and the bomb itself. Recently, researchers discovered that a piece of red Trinitrite took the form of a quasicrystal.

First discovered in the laboratory in the 1980s, quasicrystals also occur in nature, notably in meteorites.

The Trinitrite is not at all radioactive.

 

 

 

 

 

Out of stock

Trinitite #10 – 1 g

35,68 $

Trinitite is a glass made during the first nuclear explosion called Trinity, in Alamogordo, New Mexico on July 16, 1945.

Trinitite is made from the vitrification of the desert sand linked to the different elements of the structure on which the bomb rested and the bomb itself. Recently, researchers discovered that a piece of red Trinitrite took the form of a quasicrystal.

First discovered in the laboratory in the 1980s, quasicrystals also occur in nature, notably in meteorites.

The Trinitrite is not at all radioactive.

 

 

 

 

 

Out of stock

Trinitite #9 – 1,2 g

42,80 $

Trinitite is a glass made during the first nuclear explosion called Trinity, in Alamogordo, New Mexico on July 16, 1945.

Trinitite is made from the vitrification of the desert sand linked to the different elements of the structure on which the bomb rested and the bomb itself. Recently, researchers discovered that a piece of red Trinitrite took the form of a quasicrystal.

First discovered in the laboratory in the 1980s, quasicrystals also occur in nature, notably in meteorites.

The Trinitrite is not at all radioactive.

 

 

 

 

 

Out of stock

Lignite couche K-T Mexique #13 – 0,8 g

32,10 $

This fossilized charcoal is a rare witness to the precise moment of the cataclysm that marked the beginning of the extinction of the dinosaurs.

This fossilized material comes from forest residues, rich in iridium, charred following a giant meteorite impact in the Yucatan Peninsula ~65 million years ago.

Outcrops of the K-T (Cretaceous-Tertiary) boundary rich in this lignite have appeared in different regions of Mexico in the Sierra Madre Oriental.

This lignite is currently protected and therefore rare to find on the market.

Out of stock

Sayh al Uhaymir 001 L5 #5 – 30 g

23,78 $

Sayh al Uhaymir 001 is a meteorite that was discovered in the Sultanate of Oman.

This is a significant fall of over 450 kg.

I was lucky enough to be able to prospect on the place and find some fragments of this meteorite in 2011.

Out of stock

AL HAGGOUNIA 008 H5 #12 – 34 g

15,46 $

Al Haggounia 008 is an ordinary chondrite of 6.270 kg composed of 31 fragments.
This meteorite was found in December 2013, 120 km northeast of Laayoune in the Western Sahara, in a place called Chwichiya (little fez) in reference to the mountain seen in this area in the shape of a fez.
Chwichiya is an area rich in meteorites.
The pieces on sale have not been cleaned by choice, they are sold as they were found.
These are the last pieces on sale!

Out of stock

AL HAGGOUNIA 008 H5 #11 – 19 g

13,08 $

Al Haggounia 008 is an ordinary chondrite of 6.270 kg composed of 31 fragments.
This meteorite was found in December 2013, 120 km northeast of Laayoune in the Western Sahara, in a place called Chwichiya (little fez) in reference to the mountain seen in this area in the shape of a fez.
Chwichiya is an area rich in meteorites.
The pieces on sale have not been cleaned by choice, they are sold as they were found.
These are the last pieces on sale!

Out of stock

Montoume #11 – 100 g

14,27 $
An impactite is a terrestrial rock modified by the impact of a large meteorite.
These rocks contain an agglomeration of fallout dust and fragments.
The Rochechouart impactites were formed as a result of a meteorite impact about 207 million years ago in New Aquitaine in the Rochechouart district.
The impact crater of the Rochechouart meteorite is called “Astroblème” because it is no longer visible following erosion.
There are several types of rocks :
Les brèches de type Babaudus, riche en verre à texture fluidale et en vacuoles
The “breccias” of Montoume type, red because of their richness in iron, metal supposed to come from the asteroid.
The “breccias” of Chassenon type, debris of glass of greenish tint.
The “breccias” of Rochechouart type, contain little glass and are constituted of elements of varied size and lithology.

 

Montoume #10 – 58 g

11,89 $
An impactite is a terrestrial rock modified by the impact of a large meteorite.
These rocks contain an agglomeration of fallout dust and fragments.
The Rochechouart impactites were formed as a result of a meteorite impact about 207 million years ago in New Aquitaine in the Rochechouart district.
The impact crater of the Rochechouart meteorite is called “Astroblème” because it is no longer visible following erosion.
There are several types of rocks :
Les brèches de type Babaudus, riche en verre à texture fluidale et en vacuoles
The “breccias” of Montoume type, red because of their richness in iron, metal supposed to come from the asteroid.
The “breccias” of Chassenon type, debris of glass of greenish tint.
The “breccias” of Rochechouart type, contain little glass and are constituted of elements of varied size and lithology.

 

Montoume #9 – 71 g

11,89 $
An impactite is a terrestrial rock modified by the impact of a large meteorite.
These rocks contain an agglomeration of fallout dust and fragments.
The Rochechouart impactites were formed as a result of a meteorite impact about 207 million years ago in New Aquitaine in the Rochechouart district.
The impact crater of the Rochechouart meteorite is called “Astroblème” because it is no longer visible following erosion.
There are several types of rocks :
Les brèches de type Babaudus, riche en verre à texture fluidale et en vacuoles
The “breccias” of Montoume type, red because of their richness in iron, metal supposed to come from the asteroid.
The “breccias” of Chassenon type, debris of glass of greenish tint.
The “breccias” of Rochechouart type, contain little glass and are constituted of elements of varied size and lithology.

 

Out of stock

Montoume #8 – 50,5 g

5,94 $
An impactite is a terrestrial rock modified by the impact of a large meteorite.
These rocks contain an agglomeration of fallout dust and fragments.
The Rochechouart impactites were formed as a result of a meteorite impact about 207 million years ago in New Aquitaine in the Rochechouart district.
The impact crater of the Rochechouart meteorite is called “Astroblème” because it is no longer visible following erosion.
There are several types of rocks :
Les brèches de type Babaudus, riche en verre à texture fluidale et en vacuoles
The “breccias” of Montoume type, red because of their richness in iron, metal supposed to come from the asteroid.
The “breccias” of Chassenon type, debris of glass of greenish tint.
The “breccias” of Rochechouart type, contain little glass and are constituted of elements of varied size and lithology.

 

Out of stock

Montoume #7 – 138 g

17,83 $
An impactite is a terrestrial rock modified by the impact of a large meteorite.
These rocks contain an agglomeration of fallout dust and fragments.
The Rochechouart impactites were formed as a result of a meteorite impact about 207 million years ago in New Aquitaine in the Rochechouart district.
The impact crater of the Rochechouart meteorite is called “Astroblème” because it is no longer visible following erosion.
There are several types of rocks :
Les brèches de type Babaudus, riche en verre à texture fluidale et en vacuoles
The “breccias” of Montoume type, red because of their richness in iron, metal supposed to come from the asteroid.
The “breccias” of Chassenon type, debris of glass of greenish tint.
The “breccias” of Rochechouart type, contain little glass and are constituted of elements of varied size and lithology.