Hadley Rille meteorite
The Hadley Rille meteorite was a meteorite discovered on the Moon at coordinates 26° 26' 0" N, 3° 39' 20" E,[1] or Station 9A, during the Apollo 15 mission in 1971. It was the second meteorite to be discovered on a Solar System body other than the Earth. The first was the Bench Crater meteorite, discovered in 1969 during the Apollo 12 mission.
Hadley Rille meteorite | |
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David R. Scott, Commander of Apollo 15 near the Hadley Rille (on the right). The Hadley Rille meteorite was found within a soil sample collected during this mission. The large rock in the photograph is not the meteorite. | |
Type | Chondrite |
Class | Enstatite chondrite |
Clan | EH-EL |
Group | EH |
Country | Earth's Moon |
Region | Hadley Rille |
Coordinates | 26°26′00″N 03°39′20″E |
Observed fall | No |
Found date | 1971 |
TKW | 3 milligrams (0.00011 oz) |
Characteristics
Within the soil sample 15602,29 collected near Hadley Rille was found an object in the 1–2 millimetres (0.039–0.079 in) size. The Hadley Rille meteorite massed about 3 milligrams (0.046 gr) and contained enstatite, kamacite, niningerite, silica, schreibersite, troilite, albite, and daubréelite. It is classed as an enstatite chondrite (EH) by the Meteoritical Society.[1]
See also
- Glossary of meteoritics
- Bench Crater meteorite
- Big Bertha (lunar sample)
- Hadley–Apennine (Moon)
- Heat Shield Rock (Mars – Meridiani Planum meteorite)
- List of Martian meteorites
- List of meteorites on Mars
References
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