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TARDA C2 Ung #12 – 0,9g

Original price was: 481,56 $.Current price is: 362,65 $.

TARDA is a meteorite that fell in Morocco on August 25, 2020.
This meteorite has been classified as C2 ungrouped, a rare type of very primitive carbonaceous.
Tagish lake is a meteorite of the same type and sells for over 1000 euros per gram.
This meteorite is composed of many very small fragments, beautiful pieces with crusts are rare.
Isotopic analyses show that some pieces have
values close to CI chondrites, and other pieces have Yamato (CY) values..
An important meteorite at the scientific level in the years to come.

Writeup from MB 109 :

Tarda 31° 49′ 35″N, 4° 40′ 46″W

Morocco

Confirmed fall: 2020

Classification: Carbonaceous chondrite (C2, ungrouped)

Classification :

(C. Agee, UNM; K. Ziegler, UNM; A. Irving, UWS; L. Garvie, ASU; D. Sheikh, FSU; P. Carpenter, WUSL; H. Chennaoui Aoudjehane, FSAC; M. Zolensky, JSC; P. Schmitt-Kopplin, HZM) Carbonaceous chondrite (C2-ungrouped). The bulk mineralogy is consistent with a petrologic grade 2, based on the predominance of smectite and serpentine together with the presence of anhydrous mafic silicates, AOA, and chondrules. The oxygen isotopes give a bimodal distribution of the δ18O-values, with one group having values somewhat like those of the CI chondrites, and the other group like values for the Yamato-type (CY) carbonaceous chondrites (King et al., 2019). However, Δ17O values are lower than those for CI and CY chondrites, and plot below the TFL. These isotopic values do not overlap with those of any established carbonaceous chondrite group, hence the ungrouped designation.

Specimens : 18.4 g including one polished thin section and one polished thick section at UWB; 21g and one polished thin section at UNM; 7 g provided by A. Aaronson and 6 g provided by J. Redelsperger at FSAC; 20 g at the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Environment, Rabat, Morocco provided by A. Aaronson; total 628 g with A. Aaronson (including 99 g, 82.4 g and 52.6 g stones); 540 g with M. Farmer and A. Karl, 260 g with J. Poblador; 480 g with D. Dickens; 145 g with M. Oulkouch; 146 g with J. Redelsperger; 31 g with B. Hoefnagels.

Out of stock

TARDA C2 Ung #11 – 1g

535,07 $

TARDA is a meteorite that fell in Morocco on August 25, 2020.
This meteorite has been classified as C2 ungrouped, a rare type of very primitive carbonaceous.
Tagish lake is a meteorite of the same type and sells for over 1000 euros per gram.
This meteorite is composed of many very small fragments, beautiful pieces with crusts are rare.
Isotopic analyses show that some pieces have
values close to CI chondrites, and other pieces have Yamato (CY) values..
An important meteorite at the scientific level in the years to come.

Writeup from MB 109 :

Tarda 31° 49′ 35″N, 4° 40′ 46″W

Morocco

Confirmed fall: 2020

Classification: Carbonaceous chondrite (C2, ungrouped)

Classification : (C. Agee, UNM; K. Ziegler, UNM; A. Irving, UWS; L. Garvie, ASU; D. Sheikh, FSU; P. Carpenter, WUSL; H. Chennaoui Aoudjehane, FSAC; M. Zolensky, JSC; P. Schmitt-Kopplin, HZM) Carbonaceous chondrite (C2-ungrouped). The bulk mineralogy is consistent with a petrologic grade 2, based on the predominance of smectite and serpentine together with the presence of anhydrous mafic silicates, AOA, and chondrules. The oxygen isotopes give a bimodal distribution of the δ18O-values, with one group having values somewhat like those of the CI chondrites, and the other group like values for the Yamato-type (CY) carbonaceous chondrites (King et al., 2019). However, Δ17O values are lower than those for CI and CY chondrites, and plot below the TFL. These isotopic values do not overlap with those of any established carbonaceous chondrite group, hence the ungrouped designation.

Specimens : 18.4 g including one polished thin section and one polished thick section at UWB; 21g and one polished thin section at UNM; 7 g provided by A. Aaronson and 6 g provided by J. Redelsperger at FSAC; 20 g at the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Environment, Rabat, Morocco provided by A. Aaronson; total 628 g with A. Aaronson (including 99 g, 82.4 g and 52.6 g stones); 540 g with M. Farmer and A. Karl, 260 g with J. Poblador; 480 g with D. Dickens; 145 g with M. Oulkouch; 146 g with J. Redelsperger; 31 g with B. Hoefnagels.

Out of stock

TARDA C2 Ung #3 – 7g

3.745,45 $

TARDA is a meteorite that fell in Morocco on August 25, 2020.
This meteorite has been classified as C2 ungrouped, a rare type of very primitive carbonaceous.
Tagish lake is a meteorite of the same type and sells for over 1000 euros per gram.
This meteorite is composed of many very small fragments, beautiful pieces with crusts are rare.
Isotopic analyses show that some pieces have
values close to CI chondrites, and other pieces have Yamato (CY) values..
An important meteorite at the scientific level in the years to come.

Writeup from MB 109 :

Tarda 31° 49′ 35″N, 4° 40′ 46″W

Morocco

Confirmed fall: 2020

Classification: Carbonaceous chondrite (C2, ungrouped)

Classification : (C. Agee, UNM; K. Ziegler, UNM; A. Irving, UWS; L. Garvie, ASU; D. Sheikh, FSU; P. Carpenter, WUSL; H. Chennaoui Aoudjehane, FSAC; M. Zolensky, JSC; P. Schmitt-Kopplin, HZM) Carbonaceous chondrite (C2-ungrouped). The bulk mineralogy is consistent with a petrologic grade 2, based on the predominance of smectite and serpentine together with the presence of anhydrous mafic silicates, AOA, and chondrules. The oxygen isotopes give a bimodal distribution of the δ18O-values, with one group having values somewhat like those of the CI chondrites, and the other group like values for the Yamato-type (CY) carbonaceous chondrites (King et al., 2019). However, Δ17O values are lower than those for CI and CY chondrites, and plot below the TFL. These isotopic values do not overlap with those of any established carbonaceous chondrite group, hence the ungrouped designation.

Specimens : 18.4 g including one polished thin section and one polished thick section at UWB; 21g and one polished thin section at UNM; 7 g provided by A. Aaronson and 6 g provided by J. Redelsperger at FSAC; 20 g at the Ministry of Energy, Mines and Environment, Rabat, Morocco provided by A. Aaronson; total 628 g with A. Aaronson (including 99 g, 82.4 g and 52.6 g stones); 540 g with M. Farmer and A. Karl, 260 g with J. Poblador; 480 g with D. Dickens; 145 g with M. Oulkouch; 146 g with J. Redelsperger; 31 g with B. Hoefnagels.

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AYDAR 002 Eucrite #9 – 5,2g

Original price was: 84,42 $.Current price is: 70,15 $.

AYDAR 002 is a fresh meteorite classified as brecciated eucrite.

The slices are beautiful with a fusion crust and show a difference
of texture.
It was discovered in the Western Sahara in a place called Afra valley.
Several kilograms of this meteorite were found in a very large area.

Out of stock

AYDAR 002 Eucrite #7 – 4,9g

78,48 $

AYDAR 002 is a fresh meteorite classified as brecciated eucrite.

The slices are beautiful with a fusion crust and show a difference
of texture.
It was discovered in the Western Sahara in a place called Afra valley.
Several kilograms of this meteorite were found in a very large area.

Out of stock

AYDAR 002 Eucrite #4 – 5,1g

83,23 $

AYDAR 002 is a fresh meteorite classified as brecciated eucrite.

The slices are beautiful with a fusion crust and show a difference
of texture.
It was discovered in the Western Sahara in a place called Afra valley.
Several kilograms of this meteorite were found in a very large area.

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NWA 11273 #1 Lunar – 2,7g

Original price was: 192,62 $.Current price is: 168,84 $.

In 2017, a new lunar meteorite was discovered in Algeria, NWA 11273.
It is classified lunar feldspathic regolith breccia.
At least 170 kilograms of this meteorite were found, which brought the price down.
This lunar meteorite is the cheapest lunar meteorite of all time!
Ten years ago lunar meteorites were selling for almost 1000 euros per gram!

Sold in a membrane box.

Out of stock

TISSINT Mars #5 – 0,69g

570,73 $

The Tissint meteorite fell on July 18, 2011 in the region of El Aglâb, in eastern Morocco, near the town of Tata.
It is the nomads who told the scientists that in the early morning of Sunday, July 18, 2011, they were awakened by a strong detonation as well as the military present in the area.

Tissint is a Martian meteorite classified as shergottite.
A Martian meteorite fall is observed on Earth about every fifty years, so it is a very rare event on the scale of a human life.
The Tissint fall zone is perfectly located with gps points and has been studied by Moroccan scientists.

Out of stock

NWA 7831 Diogénite #1 – 9g

95,12 $

NWA 7831 was discovered in March 2013.
This meteorite is a very beautiful and rare diogenite of the same type as Tataouine.
About 20 kilograms of this meteorite were found in the Western Sahara about 100 km northeast of Laâyoune in a place called Chwichiya.

NWA 10158 Mésosidérite #3 – 17,9g

105,83 $

NWA 10158 is a mesosiderite meteorite.

It is a rare type, but the particularity of NWA 10158 is that it must have arrived on Earth a long time ago for proof of its terrestrialisation.
NWA 10158 does not look like a classical mesosiderite and it is only with a scientific analysis that its exact type has been determined.

This meteorite is nevertheless an aesthetic meteorite, and each cut slice is different.

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AL HAGGOUNIA 09 Eucrite #2 – 5,47g

Original price was: 94,18 $.Current price is: 59,45 $.

In April 2013, I prospect for meteorites in Morocco with a group of friends.
After an unsuccessful search for the Martian meteorite NWA 7397, we met a group of meteorite hunters who took us to the site of a new meteorite discovery on April 18.
The day before, a meteorite of 219 grams was found, the meteorite hunters thought at first that this meteorite was a lunar meteorite.
It finally turns out that this meteorite is not a lunar meteorite but an eucrite.

Other fragments will be discovered later including the supposed main mass (332.85 grams) on April 24, 2013 by Lahcen Oukhouya meteorite hunter and native of Smara.
I was able to acquire the main mass of this fall, as well as 8 other fragments through Ali Oulmaleh (meteorite dealer in Erfoud) and Mohamed Elguirah (meteorite hunter in Tan Tan).
This meteorite was found 120 km northeast of Laayoune in the Western Sahara, in a place called Chwichiya (little fez) in reference to the mountain seen in this region in the shape of a fez.
Chwichiya is an area rich in meteorites, and in particular achondrites, 4 different achondrites have been discovered within a radius of 6 kilometers!

This meteorite is a brecciated eucrite, composed of 11 pieces for a total of 1038 grams. This meteorite has the particularity to have two different textures.

Petrography: Breccia with coarse basaltic clasts in a fine-grained matrix. The matrix has a doleritic texture with plagioclase grain size of several mm. Dominant minerals are exsolved pyroxene and mm-sized calcic plagioclase laths. Minor phases include chromite, silica, Ca-Phosphate, troilite and metal.

St Séverin LL6 – 0,8 g

117,72 $

After detonations and whistles on June 27, 1966, a number of stones fell on the towns of Severin and Allemans. The largest stone weighed 113 kg, but the eight stones recovered appear to be separate fragments of a single original stone.

Out of stock

NWA#3 – 99g

117,72 $

Very nice ordinary chondrite for sale at reasonable price.

Out of stock

NWA 12770 Iron – 91g

273,48 $

NWA 12770 an iron meteorite of type octahedrite IIIAB.
This piece for sale is very aesthetic, on the cut we can see Widmanstätten figures.

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AL HAGGOUNIA 09 Eucrite #1 – 8,46g

Original price was: 150,24 $.Current price is: 92,15 $.

In April 2013, I prospect for meteorites in Morocco with a group of friends.
After an unsuccessful search for the Martian meteorite NWA 7397, we met a group of meteorite hunters who took us to the site of a new meteorite discovery on April 18.
The day before, a meteorite of 219 grams was found, the meteorite hunters thought at first that this meteorite was a lunar meteorite.
It finally turns out that this meteorite is not a lunar meteorite but an eucrite.

Other fragments will be discovered later including the supposed main mass (332.85 grams) on April 24, 2013 by Lahcen Oukhouya meteorite hunter and native of Smara.
I was able to acquire the main mass of this fall, as well as 8 other fragments through Ali Oulmaleh (meteorite dealer in Erfoud) and Mohamed Elguirah (meteorite hunter in Tan Tan).
This meteorite was found 120 km northeast of Laayoune in the Western Sahara, in a place called Chwichiya (little fez) in reference to the mountain seen in this region in the shape of a fez.
Chwichiya is an area rich in meteorites, and in particular achondrites, 4 different achondrites have been discovered within a radius of 6 kilometers!

This meteorite is a brecciated eucrite, composed of 11 pieces for a total of 1038 grams. This meteorite has the particularity to have two different textures.

Petrography: Breccia with coarse basaltic clasts in a fine-grained matrix. The matrix has a doleritic texture with plagioclase grain size of several mm. Dominant minerals are exsolved pyroxene and mm-sized calcic plagioclase laths. Minor phases include chromite, silica, Ca-Phosphate, troilite and metal.

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VINALES L6 #4 – 7g

Original price was: 109,39 $.Current price is: 87,98 $.

In a clear sky, a fireball, followed by a trail of smoke was seen over Havana, Cuba, and then fell to the ground in a shower of fragments in the Vinales Valley, 180 km from the capital, in the west of the country… Falling around 1:30 pm local time, on February 1, without causing any casualties, the fall of the meteorite was accompanied by a lightning bolt and a strong explosion. This meteorite was classified as an ordinary chondrite type L6, about 50 kg of this meteorite were found.

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VINALES L6 #2 – 9g

Original price was: 160,52 $.Current price is: 128,41 $.

In a clear sky, a fireball, followed by a trail of smoke was seen over Havana, Cuba, and then fell to the ground in a shower of fragments in the Vinales Valley, 180 km from the capital, in the west of the country… Falling around 1:30 pm local time, on February 1, without causing any casualties, the fall of the meteorite was accompanied by a lightning bolt and a strong explosion. This meteorite was classified as an ordinary chondrite type L6, about 50 kg of this meteorite were found.