St-Robert meteorite explained

St-Robert
Type:Chondrite
Class:Ordinary chondrite
Group:H5
Composition:olivine Fa18.4, pyroxene Fs18.5; contains 20% Ni-Fe, 10% FeS.
Weathering:W0
Country:Canada
Region:Quebec
Lat Long:45.9667°N -73°W
Observed Fall:Yes
Fall Date:June 14, 1994. 8:02pm EDT
Tkw:25.4kg (56lb)

St-Robert is an ordinary chondrite meteorite fell on Quebec on June 14, 1994.

History

The entry of a ~2 tonne meteoroid into the Earth's atmosphere produced a daylight fireball visible from Quebec, Ontario, New Hampshire, Vermont and New York. The terminal point of the fireball was located northeast of Montreal, Quebec at an altitude of ~.[1] A sonic boom shook the entire Montreal region as the fireball passed overhead. The fireball was recorded by satellites maintained by the U.S. Department of Defense and seismographic stations within Canada. Observers in the area of Saint-Robert who witnessed the terminal explosion also heard the fragments falling and striking the earth.

The first mass was recovered within minutes of the fall, from a deep pit, east of Saint-Robert by Stephane Forcier.[2] The stone was cold to the touch. Over the next three months 20 other stones were recovered from shallow pits, with largest weighing .

See also

Notes and References

  1. Brown, P., Hildebrand, A. R., Green, D. W. E., Page, D., Jacobs, C., Revelle, D., 1996, The fall of the St-Robert meteorite, Meteoritics, vol. 31, pages 502-517
  2. Web site: St. Robert Meteorite.