2.65" Lunar Meteorite Slice (10.5 g) - NWA 8277

This is a 2.65" wide (10.5 gram) slice of the lunar meteorite, NWA 8277.

The NWA 8277 Lunar Meteorite

NWA 8277 was a single 773-gram stone purchased from Morocco in 2013. Its fall was unobserved. The exterior has no fusion crust, and is irregularly sandblasted with numerous light- and dark-colored clasts. Slicing and polishing reveals a brecciated texture with white feldspar and green-brown pyroxene with olivine grains, all set in a dark gray-green matrix.

Meteoritical Bulletin: Entry for Lunary Meteorite NWA 8277

Moon Rocks... On Earth...

Think the only moon rocks on Earth are samples brought back from Apollo missions? Think again!

Lunar meteorites are formed like other stony (chondrite) meteorites, but they were ejected into space by meteorites and other celestial bodies hitting the moon. Almost all lunar meteorites are brecciated amalgamations of feldspathic and basaltic rocks commonly found on the Moon's surface.

Lunar meteorites are pretty rare to find on Earth: the vast majority of meteorites are from the asteroid belt, and less than 1 percent of classified meteorites are lunar in origin. The total mass of all known lunar meteorites is probably less than 1,000 kilograms. Owning a piece of the moon is a pretty rare accomplishment!

One reason they are so rare is because lunar meteorites superficially look just like earth rocks. Even a true meteorite expert would not recognize a lunar meteor laying on the ground among earthly stones. Lunar meteorites have only been recognized in places naturally devoid of rocks, like sandy deserts and ice sheets. In fact, there has never been a lunar meteorite classified from North America, South America or Europe. Most are found in the Sahara Desert (Northwest Africa), Antarctica, or Oman. All Antarctic meteorites are governmental property so they cannot be privately attained.
FOR SALE
$1,950
DETAILS
TYPE
Lunar (Breccia)
LOCATION
Northwest Africa
SIZE
2.65 x 1.47", .074" thick, Weight: 10.5 grams
ITEM
#263335