header
  MetSoc Home            Publications            Contacts  
Search the Meteoritical Bulletin Database
Last update: 24 Apr 2024
Search for: Search type: Search limits: Display: Publication:
Names
Text help
Places
Classes
Years
Contains
Starts with
Exact
Sounds like
NonAntarctic
Falls  Non-NWAs
What's new
  in the last:
Limit to approved meteorite names
Search text:
 
Brunflo
Basic information Name: Brunflo
     This is an official name for a relict meteorite. Relict meteorites are composed mostly of terrestrial minerals, but are thought to have once been meteorites. Note: evidence that this was once a meteorite may not have been critically evaluated.
Abbreviation: There is no official abbreviation for this meteorite.
Observed fall: No
Year found: 1980
Country: Sweden
Classification
  history:
Meteoritical Bulletin:  MB 59  (1981)  H?
NHM Catalogue:  5th Edition  (2000)  H
MetBase:  v. 7.1  (2006)  H
Recommended:  Relict H    [explanation]

Writeuphelp
Writeup from MB 59:
Warning: the following text was scanned and may contain character recognition errors. Refer to the original to be sure of accuracy.

DISCOVERY OF THE BRUNFLO, SWEDEN, STONY METEORITE

Name: BRUNFLO

Place of find: Rodbrottet quarry, near Brunflo, Sweden.

63°07'N., 14°17'E.

Date of find: Recognized 1980

Class and type: Stone. Chondrite (H-group?).

Number of individual

specimens: 1

Total weight: Not known.

Circumstances of find: Found, highly altered, in a block of Ordovician limestone (about 463 m.y. old). Chondrule structures are recognized but the only original mineral preserved is chromite, the composition of which suggests an H-group classification. Meteoritic silicates have been replaced by calcite, barite, a Cr-V-"phengite" and a cobaltite-group mineral.

Source: P. Thorslund and F.E. Wickman, 1981. Middle Ordovician chondrite in fossiliferous limestone from Brunflo, central Sweden. Nature 289, 285.

Catalogs:
References: Published in Meteoritical Bulletin, no. 59, Meteoritics 16, 193-199 (1981)
Find references in NASA ADS:
Find references in Google Scholar:
Photos:
CreditPhotos
Photos from the Encyclopedia of Meteorites:
unknown   
Geography:

Sweden
Coordinates:
     Catalogue of Meteorites:   (63° 7'N, 14° 17'E)
     Recommended::   (63° 7'N, 14° 17'E)
Proximity search:
Find nearby meteorites: enter search radius (km):
Crosslinks:
Also see:
  This lists the most popular meteorites among people who looked up this meteorite.
Revision
  history:
  This lists important revisions made to data for this record.

Direct link to this page