Hadley Rille meteorite
Hadley Rille meteorite | |
---|---|
David R. Scott, Commander of Apollo 15 near the Hadley Rille (on the right). The Hadley Rille meteorite was found within a soil sample collected during this mission. The large rock in the photograph is not the meteorite. | |
Type | Chondrite |
Class | Enstatite chondrite |
Clan | EH-EL |
Group | EH |
Country | Earth's Moon |
Region | Hadley Rille |
Coordinates | 26°26′00″N 03°39′20″E / 26.43333°N 3.65556°ECoordinates: 26°26′00″N 03°39′20″E / 26.43333°N 3.65556°E |
Observed fall | No |
Found date | 1971 |
TKW | 3 milligrams (0.00011 oz) |
The Hadley Rille meteorite was a meteorite discovered on the Moon at coordinates 26° 26' 0" N, 3° 39' 20" E,[1] during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971. It was the second meteorite to be discovered on a solar system body other than the Earth. The first was the Bench Crater meteorite, discovered in 1969.
Characteristics
Within the soil sample 15602,29 collected near Hadley Rille was found an object in the 1–2 millimetres (0.039–0.079 in) size. The Hadley Rille meteorite massed about 3 milligrams (0.046 gr) and contained enstatite, kamacite, niningerite, silica, schreibersite, troilite, albite, and daubréelite. It is classed as an enstatite chondrite (EH) by the Meteoritical Society.[1]
See also
- Glossary of meteoritics
- Bench Crater meteorite
- Hadley–Apennine (Moon)
- Heat Shield Rock (Mars - Meridiani Planum meteorite)
- List of Martian meteorites
- List of meteorites on Mars
References
|
|
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, March 01, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.