Stannern (meteorite)

Stannern

Small fragment
Type Achondrite
Class Asteroidal achondrite
Clan HED meteorite
Group Eucrite-mmict[1]
Parent body Possibly 4 Vesta
Country Czech Republic
Region Moravia
Coordinates 49°17′N 15°34′E / 49.283°N 15.567°E / 49.283; 15.567Coordinates: 49°17′N 15°34′E / 49.283°N 15.567°E / 49.283; 15.567[1]
Observed fall Yes
Fall date 1808-05-22[1]
TKW 52 kilograms (115 lb)[1]
Strewn field Yes

One of the Stannern meteorites, oriented individual

Stannern meteorite fell on May 22, 1808 into the Moravian village Stonařov (in German Stannern), in today's Czech Republic.

Classification

The meteorites were classified into the HED meteorite clan (possibly from asteroid 4 Vesta) and eucrite sub-group.

The fall

The fall was witnessed by many and dozens of fragments were soon collected by naturalist Karl Schreibers.

The meteorite shower occurred on Sunday 22 May 1808, shortly before 06:00. The meteorites fell into an elliptic area (strewnfield) oriented north-south with height about 12.5 kilometres (7.8 mi) and width 4.8 kilometres (3.0 mi), into Stonařov and neighbouring villages (among them Otín, Rosice, Cerekvička, Dlouhá Brtnice, Hladov, Stará Říše). The event was witnessed by people on their way into the church. According to the local chronicle the fall took about 8 minutes and the number of meteorites was estimated to 200-300. No person was injured and no property was damaged.

Shortly after the fall Dr. Karl Schreibers, director of natural science collections in Vienna, arrived to the place, organized search for the fragments and thoroughly documented the event.

Sample distribution

Most of the 66 found fragments weight between 32–48 grams (1.1–1.7 oz) with the largest one having over 6 kilograms (13 lb). Total recovered weight was about 52 kilograms (115 lb). The stones found their way into museums all over the world. The largest fragment is stored in the Museum of Natural History in Vienna.

Literature

See also

References

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