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aarhus+meteorite Latitude and Longitude:

56°11′N 10°14′E / 56.183°N 10.233°E / 56.183; 10.233
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aarhus
Memorial stone for the 300 g part found in Riis Skov. The contours of this piece is depicted.
Type Chondrite
Class Ordinary chondrite
GroupH6
Country Denmark
Region Region Midtjylland
Coordinates 56°11′N 10°14′E / 56.183°N 10.233°E / 56.183; 10.233 [1]
Observed fallYes
Fall date2 October 1951
Found date2 October 1951
TKW720g (300g and 420g)

Aarhus is an H chondrite meteorite that fell to earth on 2 October 1951 at 18:15 in Aarhus, Denmark. The meteor split just before the otherwise undramatic impact and two pieces were recovered. They are known as Aarhus I (at 300g) and Aarhus II (at 420g). Aarhus I was found in the small woodland of Riis Skov, just a few minutes after impact. [2] [3]

Classification

It is an H chondrite and belongs to the petrologic type 6, so it was assigned to the H6 group. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Meteoritical Bulletin Database: Aarhus
  2. ^ Grady, Monica M (31 August 2000). Catalogue of Meteorites. London: Natural History Museum, Cambridge University Press. p. 55. ISBN  978-0-521-66303-8. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  3. ^ StenoMusen 15. Pictures of the pieces.

Sources

  • "Aarhus-meteoret" (PDF). StenoMusen 15 (in Danish). The Steno Museum. October 2001. pp. 4–5. Retrieved 30 April 2014.

aarhus+meteorite Latitude and Longitude:

56°11′N 10°14′E / 56.183°N 10.233°E / 56.183; 10.233
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aarhus
Memorial stone for the 300 g part found in Riis Skov. The contours of this piece is depicted.
Type Chondrite
Class Ordinary chondrite
GroupH6
Country Denmark
Region Region Midtjylland
Coordinates 56°11′N 10°14′E / 56.183°N 10.233°E / 56.183; 10.233 [1]
Observed fallYes
Fall date2 October 1951
Found date2 October 1951
TKW720g (300g and 420g)

Aarhus is an H chondrite meteorite that fell to earth on 2 October 1951 at 18:15 in Aarhus, Denmark. The meteor split just before the otherwise undramatic impact and two pieces were recovered. They are known as Aarhus I (at 300g) and Aarhus II (at 420g). Aarhus I was found in the small woodland of Riis Skov, just a few minutes after impact. [2] [3]

Classification

It is an H chondrite and belongs to the petrologic type 6, so it was assigned to the H6 group. [1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Meteoritical Bulletin Database: Aarhus
  2. ^ Grady, Monica M (31 August 2000). Catalogue of Meteorites. London: Natural History Museum, Cambridge University Press. p. 55. ISBN  978-0-521-66303-8. Retrieved 30 April 2014.
  3. ^ StenoMusen 15. Pictures of the pieces.

Sources

  • "Aarhus-meteoret" (PDF). StenoMusen 15 (in Danish). The Steno Museum. October 2001. pp. 4–5. Retrieved 30 April 2014.

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