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Meteorite**NWA 5000, LUNAR FELD. BRECCIA**1.708 Gram Slice, WORLD FAMOUS MOON!!!

$ 633.6

Availability: 42 in stock
  • Condition: New

    Description

    Hello up for auction is NWA 5000 classified as LUNAR FELDSPATHIC BRECCIA, WORLD FAMOUS!!! This gorgeous slice weighs 1.708 Grams and has a gorgeous matrix with nice metal impacting inclusion. This meteorite was purchased from Jared Collins who purchased from the Hupe Brothers, comes with 2 COA cards. A single, large cuboidal stone (11.528 kg) with approximate dimensions 27 cm × 24 cm × 20 cm. One side (which appears to have been embedded downward in light brown mud) has preserved regmaglypts and is partially covered by translucent, pale greenish fusion crust with fine contraction cracks. Abundant large beige to white, coarse-grained clasts up to 8 cm across (some of which have been eroded out on exterior surfaces of the stone, likely by eolian sand blasting) and sparse black, vitreous clasts up to 2 cm across (containing irregular small white inclusions) are set in a dark gray to black, partially glassy breccia matrix. One partially eroded clast exposed on an exterior surface contains both the coarse grained beige lithology and the more resistant black, vitreous lithology in sharp contact. This meteorite comes with display case, thanks for your interest and take care.
    Name: Northwest Africa 5000
    This is an OFFICIAL meteorite name.
    Abbreviation: NWA 5000
    Observed fall: No
    Year found: 2007
    Country: Morocco
    Mass: 11.53 kg
    Northwest Africa 5000
    Morocco
    Find: July 2007
    Achondrite (lunar, feldspathic breccia)
    History: Found in July 2007 in southern Morocco and provided to Adam Hupé in October 2007.
    Physical characteristics: A single, large cuboidal stone (11.528 kg) with approximate dimensions 27 cm × 24 cm × 20 cm. One side (which appears to have been embedded downward in light brown mud) has preserved regmaglypts and is partially covered by translucent, pale greenish fusion crust with fine contraction cracks. Abundant large beige to white, coarse-grained clasts up to 8 cm across (some of which have been eroded out on exterior surfaces of the stone, likely by eolian sand blasting) and sparse black, vitreous clasts up to 2 cm across (containing irregular small white inclusions) are set in a dark gray to black, partially glassy breccia matrix. One partially eroded clast exposed on an exterior surface contains both the coarse grained beige lithology and the more resistant black, vitreous lithology in sharp contact.
    Petrography: (A. Irving and S. Kuehner, UWS) Almost monomict fragmental breccia dominated by Mg-suite olivine gabbro clasts consisting predominantly of coarse-grained (0.5-2 mm) calcic plagioclase, pigeonite (some with fine exsolution lamellae), and olivine with accessory merrillite, Mg-bearing ilmenite, Ti-bearing chromite, baddeleyite, rare zirconolite, silica polymorph, K-feldspar, kamacite, and troilite. Some gabbro clasts have shock injection veins composed mostly of glass containing myriad fine troilite blebs and engulfed mineral fragments. Black, vitreous impact melt clasts consist of sporadic, small angular fragments (apparently surviving relics) of gabbro and related mineral phases in a very fine grained, non-vesicular, ophitic-textured matrix of pigeonite laths (up to 20 microns long × 2 microns wide) and interstitial plagioclase with tiny spherical grains of kamacite, irregular grains of schreibersite and rare troilite.
    Classification: Achondrite (lunar, feldspathic breccia). Specimens: A total of 40.2 g of sample, two polished mounts and one large polished thin section are on deposit at UWS. AHupé hold the main mass.
    Submitted by: A. Irving, UWS.
    Data from:
    MB93
    Table 2
    Line 173:
    Place of purchase: Find in Morocco
    Date: October 2007
    Mass (g): 11.528 kg
    Pieces: 1
    Class: Lunar
    Type spec mass (g): 40.2