The Mysterious Ungrouped Achondrite NWA 15915. Weird meteorite, no reserve price. - 1.04 g - (1)






Over 20 years collecting meteorites; former museum curator and experienced restorer.
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The Mysterious ungrouped Achondrite NWA 15915 is a weird meteorite from Algeria, Northwest Africa, weighing 1.04 g.
Description from the seller
A new analysis of the meteorite NWA 15915 shows that it likely originated from a world similar to Mercury in its composition—but not Mercury itself.
Northwest Africa 15915 (NWA 15915)
Algeria
Purchased: February 2023
Classification: Ungrouped achondrite
History: Purportedly found near Aougrout, Algeria. The largest stone was purchased from the finder by Jaouad Chaoui in October 2022, and subsequently cut and sold in two portions to Jay Piatek and Ben Hoefnagels in February 2023. Three additional stones found at the same location were purchased by Mark Lyon in May 2023 from Jaouad Chaoui.
Physical characteristics: The pale yellowish stones (1359, 808, 650, and 26 g) are partially coated with black fusion crust. The very fresh interiors are predominantly beige in color and somewhat friable.
Petrography: (A. Irving, UWS, and J. Boesenberg, BrownU) Coarse-grained protogranular aggregate (mean grain size ~2 mm) composed predominantly of homogeneous, almost pure end-member augite (with sparse, very thin exsolution lamellae of enstatite) accompanied by subordinate discrete grains of enstatite (~10 vol.%) and accessory daubreelite, alabandite, troilite, minor low-Ni kamacite, and secondary Fe oxide. Olivine and plagioclase are absent.
Geochemistry: Augite (Fs0.0-0.1 Wo37.5-43.3, FeO = 0.02-0.08 wt.%, N = 16), enstatite (Fs0.1-0.3 Wo0.5-3.2, N = 9). Oxygen isotopes (D. Ibarra, BrownU): analysis of an acid-washed subsample by laser fluorination yielded, respectively, δ17O 3.369, δ18O 6.470, Δ17O -0.035 per mil (TFL slope value = 0.526).
Classification: Achondrite (ungrouped, Mg-rich clinopyroxenite). These specimens show some petrologic and isotopic similarities to Mg-rich websteritic achondrite NWA 13307, but differ in being much richer in clinopyroxene. Although the Δ17O values for both of these Mg-rich specimens are identical, the δ18O value for this specimen is higher by 1 per mil relative to NWA 13307.
Specimens: 23.8 g including one polished thin section at UWB; portions of the 1359 g main mass are held separately by Mr. J. Piatek (645 g) and Mr. B. Hoefnagels (650 g); other stones of 808 g, 650 g, and 26 g are held by Mr. M. Lyon.
Shock stage: low
Weathering grade: low
Classifier: A. Irving, UWS, and J. Boesenberg.
This lot comes with a certificate of authenticity.
Thanks for your interest.
A new analysis of the meteorite NWA 15915 shows that it likely originated from a world similar to Mercury in its composition—but not Mercury itself.
Northwest Africa 15915 (NWA 15915)
Algeria
Purchased: February 2023
Classification: Ungrouped achondrite
History: Purportedly found near Aougrout, Algeria. The largest stone was purchased from the finder by Jaouad Chaoui in October 2022, and subsequently cut and sold in two portions to Jay Piatek and Ben Hoefnagels in February 2023. Three additional stones found at the same location were purchased by Mark Lyon in May 2023 from Jaouad Chaoui.
Physical characteristics: The pale yellowish stones (1359, 808, 650, and 26 g) are partially coated with black fusion crust. The very fresh interiors are predominantly beige in color and somewhat friable.
Petrography: (A. Irving, UWS, and J. Boesenberg, BrownU) Coarse-grained protogranular aggregate (mean grain size ~2 mm) composed predominantly of homogeneous, almost pure end-member augite (with sparse, very thin exsolution lamellae of enstatite) accompanied by subordinate discrete grains of enstatite (~10 vol.%) and accessory daubreelite, alabandite, troilite, minor low-Ni kamacite, and secondary Fe oxide. Olivine and plagioclase are absent.
Geochemistry: Augite (Fs0.0-0.1 Wo37.5-43.3, FeO = 0.02-0.08 wt.%, N = 16), enstatite (Fs0.1-0.3 Wo0.5-3.2, N = 9). Oxygen isotopes (D. Ibarra, BrownU): analysis of an acid-washed subsample by laser fluorination yielded, respectively, δ17O 3.369, δ18O 6.470, Δ17O -0.035 per mil (TFL slope value = 0.526).
Classification: Achondrite (ungrouped, Mg-rich clinopyroxenite). These specimens show some petrologic and isotopic similarities to Mg-rich websteritic achondrite NWA 13307, but differ in being much richer in clinopyroxene. Although the Δ17O values for both of these Mg-rich specimens are identical, the δ18O value for this specimen is higher by 1 per mil relative to NWA 13307.
Specimens: 23.8 g including one polished thin section at UWB; portions of the 1359 g main mass are held separately by Mr. J. Piatek (645 g) and Mr. B. Hoefnagels (650 g); other stones of 808 g, 650 g, and 26 g are held by Mr. M. Lyon.
Shock stage: low
Weathering grade: low
Classifier: A. Irving, UWS, and J. Boesenberg.
This lot comes with a certificate of authenticity.
Thanks for your interest.
