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Ash Creek - Famous 2009 Texas Hammer Fall - Crusted Fragment

Ash Creek - Famous 2009 Texas Hammer Fall - Crusted Fragment

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This is a fragment of the famous Ash Creek Texas fall from Feb 15, 2009.  (also called "West Texas")  This fall was widely observed and created a media circus as dozens of meteorite hunters descended on the area to search local farms for additional specimens.  At least one stone struck a tool shed, bounced, and landed at the feet of a witness.  Another meteorite was discovered by Hopper the Dog (a pet of a local farmer).  Ash Creek is rarely seen in small affordable fragments.  This is the only specimen I have, and once it's gone, I will be out of stock.

Ash Creek is a brecciated L6 chondrite.  This specimen weighs 40mg and it is a fresh fragment that shows a metal fleck and has fusion crust on it.  Refer to the photo.  You get the actual specimen shown in the photo.  The black centimeter cube is shown for scale and is not included.

From the Meteoritical Bulletin entry on Ash Creek
:

Ash Creek                              31°48.3′N, 97°00.6′W

McLennan County, Texas, United States

Fall: 15 February 2009; 11:00 AM CST (UT-6)

Ordinary chondrite (L6)

History: On Sunday February 15, 2009 (11:00 A.M. CST), News 8 cameraman Eddie Garcia recorded a fireball 180 km south of downtown Austin, Texas. From SE of Austin to Ft. Worth, many people observed the bolide. Using National Weather Service Doppler reflectivity radar measurements (NWS Ft. Worth and Granger stations) the bolide location was recorded at 11:03 A.M. D. Dawn led a team, which interviewed witnesses in the strewn field within 48 hours following the fall. In southern Hill County, straddling the northern corner of McLennan County, sonic booms were widely heard for a duration of 20–30 s in the area from Hubbard to Aquilla. The fireball was bright and the meteoroid fragmented overhead near Birome, where the sonic booms were reported loudest. In Aquilla, the rumblings were likened to “a jet taking off,” and the event was described at 30–40 degrees altitude in the eastern sky, with some horizontal movement. Strong sonic booms were widely reported from Hubbard and Penelope. J. Trussell heard a rumbling, which initially vibrated a window at about 11:00 A.M. CST. He looked north along Ash Creek and saw two segments of a smoke trail separated by a thick cloud. Shortly afterwards, a blackened stone rolled near his foot and a second impacted a shed behind him. Meteorites were found on February 17 by D. Sadilenko and D. Dawn on the banks Ash Creek, northern corner of McLennan County.

Physical Characteristics: Three large masses were found: a 1.7 kg specimen recovered by L.B. Etter on a farm in Menlow; a 1.673 kg stone purchased by meteorite dealer S. Arnold; and a 1.5 kg specimen purchased by M. Farmer from an anonymous landowner who suggested it was found in the vicinity of Aquilla. All other masses reported were less than 300 g each. According to reports, over 300 stones were found in McLennan and Hill Counties with an estimated total of over 11.7 kg. Approximately 75% of the finds were completely covered with thick black fusion crust, often with dark rust colored spots, even on specimens recovered within two days of the fall. Drizzle and heavy dew wet specimens in the strewn field for the first two nights following the fall, and heavy rain on March 13 soaked the area, oxidizing many specimens. Broken and cut surfaces reveal a dark/light gray breccia.

Petrography (A. Rubin, UCLA): Many plagioclase grains exceed 50 μm in size. Some metal grains contain irregular troilite inclusions. Metallic Cu is present in some metal. Metal- and sulfide-bearing shock veins are present and the meteorite exhibits silicate darkening.

Mineral Compositions (A. Rubin, UCLA): Olivine (Fa24.2 ± 0.2; n = 12), low-Ca pyroxene (Fs20.5 ± 0.7, Wo1.6 ± 0.2; n = 12). Taenite is more abundant than kamacite; average compositions: kamacite (Fe = 93.1%, Ni = 5.8%, Co = 0.83%; n = 4) and taenite (Fe = 69.6%, Ni = 30.3%, Co = 0.30%; n = 9).

Classification: Ordinary chondrite (L6) breccia; S3, W0.
Type Specimen: 30.91 g is at UCLA including a crusted 17.8 g piece, a 10.02 g end cut and a 3.09 g slice. M. Farmer holds 1.5 kg, D. Stimpson purchased Etter’s 1.7 kg mass; and the 1.673 kg mass was sliced and sold.  


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