4.5" Aletai Iron Meteorite Slab (930g) - China

This is a 4.5" wide (930 gram) slab that comes from the Aletai iron meteorite that's considered to have the longest strewn field in the world. It has been nicely cut/etched across 3 faces to display the complex Widmanstätten pattern that the meteorite is so well known for.

It comes with an acrylic display stand.

The Aletai Meteorite

The Aletai meteorite began as a massive meteor--estimated be up to 100 tons--that broke up upon entry into Earth's atmosphere, depositing meteorite fragments across China, some as massive as 28 tons. The strewn field was approximately 500 kilometers long. The shower of meteorite fragments were spread out over such a large area that specimens were given a variety of different names, primarily names of cities they were found near. It wasn't until studies determined that they all originated from the same event that they were either renamed or considered synonymous with Aletai.

The size of Aletai's strewn field has been attributed to entering Earth's atmosphere at a very low trajectory, basically skipping through our upper atmosphere like a stone skipping across a pond as the meteor broke up.

Aletai contains a relatively large amount of the element iridium. Iridium is found in much higher concentrations in meteorites than in the Earth's crust: the 66 million-year-old K-T Boundary, marking the extinction event that wiped out the dinosaurs, contains amounts of iridium on par with meteoritic concentrations. This inspired the notion that a massive meteorite impact 66 million years ago, now known as Chixculub, was responsible for the extinction of non-avian dinosaurs.
SOLD
DETAILS
TYPE
Iron Meteorite
LOCATION
China
SIZE
4.5 x 3.75", .7" thick, Weight: 930 grams
CATEGORY
ITEM
#232277