编号 102000445

已不存在
阿尔泰 铁陨石立方体 – 威德曼斯坦纹样 - 1075 g
竞投已结束
2天前

阿尔泰 铁陨石立方体 – 威德曼斯坦纹样 - 1075 g

Description : I am pleased to offer this polished cube of the official iron meteorite Aletai, cut from a large mass discovered in China. All six faces of the cube have been carefully polished, revealing spectacular Widmanstätten patterns, clearly visible in the photographs. These crystalline structures, formed by extremely slow cooling within the core of a differentiated parent body, make this specimen both scientifically important and visually striking. With its sharp geometric presentation and fully exposed octahedrite structure, this piece represents an elegant and museum-quality display specimen of one of the world’s great iron meteorites. “Six-Face Polished Aletai Iron – Classic Widmanstätten Structure” Meteorite Details : Meteorite name: Aletai (official meteorite name) Abbreviation: No official abbreviation Classification: Iron meteorite, IIIE-an Country of origin: China Region: Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Altai Prefecture Year found: 1898 Total known mass: Approximately 74 tonnes Observed fall: No Meteoritical Bulletin: MB 105 (2016) Approval date: 27 November 2016 (revised 3 October 2021 – new mass data) Scientific & Historical Summary : Chemical and petrographic analyses demonstrate that multiple iron masses discovered across northern Xinjiang belong to the same paired fall, now officially designated under the single name “Aletai.” Previously used names such as Armanty, Xinjiang (b), Xinjiang 008, and Ulasitai are now synonyms of Aletai under the Meteoritical Bulletin nomenclature system. The Aletai iron masses form a NW–SE strewn field extending approximately 425 km across China (with no confirmed Mongolian finds). Petrography: Major phases: kamacite, taenite, plessite Minor phases: schreibersite, daubréelite, troilite, haxonite Kamacite bandwidth: 0.89 ± 0.41 mm The Widmanstätten structure visible on this cube is characteristic of IIIE iron meteorites and results from extremely slow cooling within a metallic planetary core. Offered Specimen : Weight: 1075 g Shape: Precision-cut cube Finish: All six faces polished Structure: Fully visible Widmanstätten figures on each face Condition: Stable iron meteorite, display-ready History & Provenance : The Aletai meteorite was first discovered in 1898 in the Xinjiang region of China. Subsequent large masses, including notable discoveries such as the Armanty, Wuxilike, and Akebulake masses, were later documented and formally unified under the official name Aletai. This cube was cut from a large Aletai mass and professionally polished to reveal its full crystalline structure. Aletai is one of the very few meteorites officially classified as Iron, IIIE-an, making it a scientifically important and highly collectible iron meteorite. Authenticity & Scientific Classification : Official meteorite name: Aletai Classification: Iron meteorite – IIIE-an Listed in: Meteoritical Bulletin MB 105 (2016) Guaranteed authentic meteoritic material Museum-quality polished cube with full Widmanstätten structure visible on all faces. FB: #galerielithique Thank you for your interest, Patrice Bachelier

编号 102000445

已不存在
阿尔泰 铁陨石立方体 – 威德曼斯坦纹样 - 1075 g

阿尔泰 铁陨石立方体 – 威德曼斯坦纹样 - 1075 g

Description :

I am pleased to offer this polished cube of the official iron meteorite Aletai, cut from a large mass discovered in China.

All six faces of the cube have been carefully polished, revealing spectacular Widmanstätten patterns, clearly visible in the photographs. These crystalline structures, formed by extremely slow cooling within the core of a differentiated parent body, make this specimen both scientifically important and visually striking.

With its sharp geometric presentation and fully exposed octahedrite structure, this piece represents an elegant and museum-quality display specimen of one of the world’s great iron meteorites.

“Six-Face Polished Aletai Iron – Classic Widmanstätten Structure”


Meteorite Details :

Meteorite name: Aletai (official meteorite name)

Abbreviation: No official abbreviation

Classification: Iron meteorite, IIIE-an

Country of origin: China

Region: Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, Altai Prefecture

Year found: 1898

Total known mass: Approximately 74 tonnes

Observed fall: No

Meteoritical Bulletin: MB 105 (2016)

Approval date: 27 November 2016 (revised 3 October 2021 – new mass data)


Scientific & Historical Summary :

Chemical and petrographic analyses demonstrate that multiple iron masses discovered across northern Xinjiang belong to the same paired fall, now officially designated under the single name “Aletai.”

Previously used names such as Armanty, Xinjiang (b), Xinjiang 008, and Ulasitai are now synonyms of Aletai under the Meteoritical Bulletin nomenclature system.

The Aletai iron masses form a NW–SE strewn field extending approximately 425 km across China (with no confirmed Mongolian finds).

Petrography:
Major phases: kamacite, taenite, plessite
Minor phases: schreibersite, daubréelite, troilite, haxonite
Kamacite bandwidth: 0.89 ± 0.41 mm

The Widmanstätten structure visible on this cube is characteristic of IIIE iron meteorites and results from extremely slow cooling within a metallic planetary core.


Offered Specimen :

Weight: 1075 g

Shape: Precision-cut cube

Finish: All six faces polished

Structure: Fully visible Widmanstätten figures on each face

Condition: Stable iron meteorite, display-ready


History & Provenance :

The Aletai meteorite was first discovered in 1898 in the Xinjiang region of China. Subsequent large masses, including notable discoveries such as the Armanty, Wuxilike, and Akebulake masses, were later documented and formally unified under the official name Aletai.

This cube was cut from a large Aletai mass and professionally polished to reveal its full crystalline structure.

Aletai is one of the very few meteorites officially classified as Iron, IIIE-an, making it a scientifically important and highly collectible iron meteorite.


Authenticity & Scientific Classification :

Official meteorite name: Aletai

Classification: Iron meteorite – IIIE-an

Listed in: Meteoritical Bulletin MB 105 (2016)

Guaranteed authentic meteoritic material

Museum-quality polished cube with full Widmanstätten structure visible on all faces.


FB: #galerielithique
Thank you for your interest,
Patrice Bachelier

竞投已结束
Francesco Moser
专家
估价  € 2,000 - € 2,500

类似物品

类别为您准备的

矿石及陨石

设置搜索提醒
设置搜索提醒,以便在有新匹配项目时随时收到通知。

该物品出现在

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

如何在Catawiki上购买

详细了解我们的买家保障

      1. 发现奇珍异品

      饱览数以千计的专家精选的稀奇物品。查看每件稀奇物品的照片、详情和估价。 

      2. 设置最高出价

      找到您喜欢的物品并设置最高出价。您可以关注拍卖直到最后,也可以让系统为您出价。您只需设置可接受的最高出价。 

      3. 安全支付

      当您付款拍下心仪的稀奇物品后,我们会确保货款的安全,直至物品安然交付与您。我们使用受信赖的支付系统来处理所有交易。 

有类似的东西要出售吗?

无论您是在线拍卖的新手还是专业销售,我们都可以帮助您为您的独特物品赚取更多收入。

出售您的物品