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Martian Meteorites | Lunar Rocks | HED Group | PAC Group | Carbonaceous Chondrites | Rare Chondrites Last Updated: March 2023

Iron Meteorites

Iron meteorites are composed largely of nickel-iron metal, and most contain only minor accessory minerals. These accessory minerals often occur in rounded nodules that consist of the iron-sulfide troilite or graphite, often surrounded by the iron-phosphide schreibersite and the iron-carbide cohenite. Despite the fact that some iron meteorites contain silicate inclusions, most have fundamentally the same superficial appearance.

Presently, iron meteorites are classified under two established systems. Just a few decades ago, iron meteorites were exclusively classified according to the macroscopic structures revealed when their polished surface was etched with nitric acid. Depending on these structures, they were separated into three classes: octahedrites, hexahedrites, and ataxites. 

IIIAB Group

With about 233 members, group IIIAB is the best-represented class of iron meteorites in our collections. Compared to the members of the IIIA subgroup, which have mostly coarse octahedrite textures, the IIIB irons usually display medium textures. Still, the members of both subgroups form a continuous sequence in structural and elemental compositions that suggests a common origin, probably representing different regions of an asteroid's core. Group IIIAB contains several prominent members representing some of the largest irons ever found. Just to name a few, there are the giants of Cape York, Chupaderos, Morito, and Willamette - have a look at our charts. Some IIIAB members contain large nodules of troilite and graphite, but silicate inclusions are rare. Despite this fact, recent research suggests a close relationship exists between the IIIAB irons and the silicate-rich main group pallasites, some of the most attractive stony-iron meteorites known. Both groups probably formed on the same parent body, a differentiated asteroid that was disrupted by a single impact event. The IIIAB iron meteorites represent fragments of the core, while the main-group pallasites are samples of the core/mantle boundary of this common parent body.

 

CAPE YORK (AGPALILIK)

Agpalilik Peninsula, 125, km Southeast of Thule and 15, km North of the Savigsivik settlement, Melville Bay, Northwest Greenland.

 Found in the summer of 1963.

Class and type: IRON, medium octahedrite, IIIAB

TKW : 58.2 MT

 

Cape York 00

485 gr

Wonderfull slice of Cape York, very nice structure !

SOLD

Cape York 01

206 gr

Large slice showing two graphite inclusion !

SOLD

 


Cape York 03

413 gr

large specimen perfect for cutting rings or watch faces.

$3150

 

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>Ordinary chondrite
 
>H Group
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