Penouille meteorite explained

Penouille
Type:Iron
Group:IAB
Structural Classification:medium octahedrite
Composition:9.4% Ni; 365 ppm Ge; 63 ppm Ga; 3.66 ppm Ir; 1.98 ppm Au; 5850 ppm Co
Country:Canada
Region:Quebec, Canada
Lat Long:48.85°N -64.4333°W
Observed Fall:no
Found Date:1984
Tkw:0.072kg (00.159lb)

Penouille is an iron meteorite[1] [2] found in 1984 in Canada.

History

A small ellipsoidal meteorite of 72g was found in summer 1984 by an eight-year-old boy, Christian Couture of Repentigny, Quebec, on a beach to the seaward side of the Presqu'ile de Penouille, a peninsula in the Baie de Gaspé. The site is approximately south of the village of Penouille, historic Comte Gaspe-Est.

Classification

It is a medium octahedrite, IAB complex.

Fragments

Terrestrial oxidation, abrasion and corrosion of this meteorite were not extensive and the fall is thought to have been relatively recent. The main mass is conserved at the Planetarium de Montreal, Canada.

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/metbull.php?code=18789 Meteoritical Bulletin Database
  2. Kissin,S. A.; Herd, R. K., 1995, Two New Iron Meteorites from the Province of Quebec, Canada, Meteoritics, vol. 30,no. 5, page 527