rockpassion
Jr. Member
- Oct 5, 2024
- 25
- 17
Mars meteorite? Ex museum collection
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Thanks for your reply. The stone has been found in the field by someone and donated to the depot collection of my small local natural history museum. They are moving to another building and couldn't keep everything. So what was not of interest to them they where trowing away. When i was there I spotted the box of rocks and this one drew my attention. The rock is a weathered example.Unfortunately, there's no way of telling from just looking at a picture. Martian meteorites usually have mineralogies which are similar to terrestrial rocks and it takes expert testing to differentiate them from terrestrial material.
Might I ask which museum and what documentation came with it? There are many smaller museums with no experience in meteoritics which don't have the required competence to perform the necessary tests.
If it has been confirmed as Martian by a laboratory with that competence, and it's from a museum collection, I would expect it to have an approved name from MetSoc and a write-up in the bulletin giving the detailed typology and analysis. Unless it's from a very recent fall/discovery but then, at minimum, I would expect a provisional name awaiting typology confirmation.
do you know which type? then i can compare. here some interesting info: https://airandspace.si.edu/stories/editorial/are-rocks-mars-and-earth-alikeI know very little about meteorites but that looks like a common igneous rock to me.
can you check if your diabase specimens are atracted to a magnet?Possibly diabase with peridotite. The black specks could be tourmaline. I’m no geologist but I carve a lot of igneous rocks.