A Stony-Iron Meteorite in the Shape of a Sphere
Live auction begins on:
July 16, 02:00 PM GMT
Estimate
2,500 - 3,500 USD
Bid
1,700 USD
Lot Details
Description
Sericho — A🦄 Stony-Iron Meteorite in the Shape of aꦏ Sphere
Pallasite
Sericho/Habaswein, Kenya (1° 5' 41"N, 39° 6' 8"E)
46mm (1꧂¾ inches) in diameter. 234 grams (.52 pounds)꧋.
4½ inches on custom stand.
A BEAUTIFUL PALLASITE SPHERE
The lore surrounding the Sericho pallasite is as interesting as this sphere is beautiful. In 2016, two camel-herdin🅠g brothers stumbled upon a number of large stones west of t🐷he village of Habaswein, south of Sericho, Kenya. As there were no other rocks in the area, the brothers decided that these must have been meteorites. Spending several weeks collecting the stones — sometimes using a hydraulic hoist because of their immense size and weight — they moved them into their homes in Habaswein. As it turns out, other locals had known about the stones for decades, and would even play atop them, but they were only recognized as meteorites after their rediscovery in 2016. To date, more than 2.8 tons of Sericho have been found in a strewn field more than 28 miles (45 km) long.
Pallasites such as Sericho are incredibly rare, acc🅘ounting for .2% — or just 1 out of 500 — of all meteorite finds. The crystals seen in this Sericho sphere are the result of small pieces of the asteroid's stony mantle becoming suspended in the molten metal of its iron-nickel core before crystallizing. The handsomely dark crystals of olivine range in hue from dark chestnut to fiery amber. This specimen was extracted from a larger piece of a Sericho meteorite that underwent a number of stages of cutting, grinding, and polishing in a sphere-making apparatus, resulting in a stunning and dramatic metallic💝 and crystal ball from outer space.
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