Loading, please wait...

Use mousewheel to zoom in and out, click to enlarge

Details

LOT 2363

Natural History - Campo Del Cielo Iron Meteorite Pair

FELL 6000-5000 YEARS B.P.

3/8 in. (2.89 grams total, 10-11 mm).

Comprising two amorphous iron Campo Del Cielo (IAB) meteorites. [2, No Reserve]

Provenance

From Chaco Province, Argentina, found 1576.
Property of an East Sussex, UK, teacher.

Literature

See Graham, Bevan and Hutchison ed., Catalogue of Meteorites, Natural History Museum, 1985, p.88, for details of this fall.

Footnotes

A crater field of roughly 26 craters was found in the vicinity of this crater, which is estimated to date to 4-5 thousand years BP. The age of the meteorite itself is thought to be c.4.5 billion years, formed as part of the development of this solar system. The largest two fragments, the 30.8 ton Gancedo and 28.8 ton El Chaco, are among the heaviest meteorite masses ever recovered on Earth. In 1576, the governor of a province in Northern Argentina commissioned the military to search for a large mass of iron, which it was believed the local people claimed had fallen from the sky and which they used for their weapon production. The expedition discovered a large mass of metal which was assumed to be an iron mine and brought back a few samples, which were described as being of unusual purity. Following the legends, in 1774 Don Bartolomé Francisco de Maguna rediscovered the iron mass. He himself did not believe that the stone had fallen from the sky and assumed that it had formed by a volcanic eruption. However, he sent the samples to the Royal Society of London. In 1990 it became protected by law.

CONDITION

VETTING:

TimeLine Auctions follows a vetting process to ensure the authenticity and legality of all items, reinforcing our commitment to integrity and responsible trading. Each antiquity, antique, and coin lot undergoes thorough examination by a vetting committee of at least ten external specialists, professional trade association members, scientists, and archaeologists: Our Vetting Process


AUCTIONS:

TimeLine is a leading auction house specialising in antiquities, ancient art, collectables, natural history, coins, medals, and books. Our auctions offer museums, collectors, historians, and enthusiasts the opportunity to acquire unique and historically significant pieces.

LOT 2363

Natural History - Campo Del Cielo Iron Meteorite Pair

Sold for (Inc. bp): £39

Print page

RELATED LOTS

  • Natural History - Fossil Saltasaurus Dinosaur Eggshell Fragment
    Natural History - Fossil Saltasaurus Dinosaur Eggshell Fragment
    Late Cretaceous Period, circa 70 million years B.P.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £91

    Displaying remains of the shell's textured surface; held in a collector's display box and accompanied y an information label which states 'Patagonia, Argentina. In the province of Neuquen in Patagonia, rocks of late Cretaceous age contain vast numbers of nests of the dinosaur Saltasaurus, together with broken fragments of hatched eggshell. These sites have provided much information about the family life of dinosaurs.' 150 grams total, 14 x 11.5 cm including case



    From Patagonia, Argentina. Ex Cambridgeshire, UK, collection.

    Lot Details

  • Natural History - Complete Ice Age Juvenile Mammoth Tusk
    Natural History - Complete Ice Age Juvenile Mammoth Tusk
    Pleistocene Period, 2.6 million-11,700 years B.P.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £2,340

    A right-side 'fossil' tusk of the extinct Mammuthus Primigenius; ivory yellow-brown in colour and finely preserved with the typically marked curvature of this species; with custom-made display stand. 2.29 kg total, 54 cm wide including stand



    From the Siberian Tundra. From the private collection of Mr J S, Northamptonshire, UK. Property of a Cambridgeshire gentleman.

    Mammoths were animals of the Ice Age; they co-existed with and were hunted by early man; Siberia is famed for discoveries of frozen mammoth carcasses (see 'Dima' and 'Lyuba' for examples) and for the hut circles where mammoth bones and tusks were used as building materials; tusks have been traded for at least 2,000 years and in modern times, Siberian natives still hunt for them and use the fossil ivory as raw material.

    Lot Details

  • Natural History - Chinese Nantan Meteorite
    Natural History - Chinese Nantan Meteorite
    Fell 1516 A.D., found 1958 A.D.

    Sold for (Inc. bp): £78

    An amorphous nickel iron Nantan meteorite (1AB), cleaned. 3.58 grams, 22 mm



    Found Nantan, Nandan County, Guangzi Region, China. Property of a Sussex, UK, teacher.

    The Nantan meteorite fell in 1516, as recorded in ancient Chinese texts; the fall exploded during descent which resulted in a shower of many individual iron meteorites over an area some 28km x 8km in Nantan County, Guangxi, China. Classified as an iron meteorite; 111CD Course Octohedrite, the composition is approximately 92% iron, 6% nickel and contains more than ten other minerals including kamacite, taenite, dominate, plessite, schreibersite, triolite, graphite and others. In 2000, pieces of the Nantan meteorite were incorporated into an art installation for The Bull Ring Shopping Centre in Birmingham, England. Today, a plaque commemorates the occasion.

    Lot Details

Stay up-to-date with the latest from TimeLine Auctions by joining our mailing list