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Ejby
Basic information Name: Ejby
     This is an OFFICIAL meteorite name.
Abbreviation: There is no official abbreviation for this meteorite.
Observed fall: Yes, confirmed fall
Year fell: 2016
Country: Denmark
Mass:help 8.94 kg
Classification
  history:
Meteoritical Bulletin:  MB 105  (2016)  H5/6
Recommended:  H5/6    [explanation]

This is 1 of 256 approved meteorites classified as H5/6.   [show all]
Search for other: H chondrites, H chondrites (type 4-7), Ordinary chondrites, and Ordinary chondrites (type 4-7)
Comments: Approved 27 Aug 2016
Writeuphelp
Writeup from MB 105:

Ejby        55°42.02’N, 12°24.33’E

Hovedstaden, Denmark

Confirmed fall: 2016 Feb 6

Classification: Ordinary chondrite (H5/6)

History: (H. Haack, NHMD): A bright fireball was observed over eastern Denmark Feb. 6, 2016, 22:07:19 (UTC+1). It was overcast in the area below the fireball, but many people reported having seen a very bright light. Pictures of the fireball were taken from three locations in Germany and one in Austria (at a distance of 890 km) by automatic cameras designed to take pictures of noctilucent clouds. A surveillance camera on the Danish west coast also recorded a video of the fireball. None of the cameras in the Danish fireball network had clear skies during the event. 279 reports with observations of the fireball and/or sound phenomena were received by the Danish fireball network. Loud sonic booms were heard by many people up to 30 km from the place where the meteorites were found. The day after the fireball was observed the first meteorite (60 g fragment) was found on the tiles in front of the main door of a private house in Ejby, which is a suburb in the western part of Copenhagen. The owner of the house had not seen the rock before. Later that day 6.5 kg of shattered fragments were found on the tiled courtyard of a business property. These fragments had not been there when the business closed on Friday – the day before the fall. During the following 19 days a total of 11 individual meteorites were found in an area measuring 5 × 5 km. The biggest piece weighed 6.5 kg. It hit a tiled area and shattered into hundreds of fragments.

Physical characteristics: 11 meteorites have been recovered, with a total mass of 8938 g. Some of the fragments were recovered wet and the weights are therefore decreasing as the samples dry out.

Petrography: (M. Patzek and A. Bischoff, IfP). Based on the study of the thin sections, Ejby is unbrecciated. Highly recrystallized areas with large plagioclase grains were observed, and areas with abundant relict chondrules also exist. Thus, the rock is transitional between type 5 and 6. In places, high metal and sulfide abundances were found. Olivine shows undulatory extinction indicating that the rock is very weakly shocked (S2). As opaque phases metals (kamacite, taenite), troilite, and chromite were observed. Other accessory phases include Cl-apatite and merrillite.

Geochemistry: (M. Patzek and A. Bischoff, IfP). The mean composition of olivine is Fa19.3±0.1 with a compositional range of Fa18.8-19.5 (n=19). The low-Ca pyroxenes have a mean composition of Fs16.9±0.2 (n= 21), range Fs16.4-17.2. Mean plagioclase is An11.5±0.9Or6.0±1.6 (n= 10; range An9.0-12.8). Kamacite has mean Ni- and Co-concentrations of 6.3 and 0.45 wt%, respectively (n=8). The taenite composition has 48.7±2.8 wt% Ni (mean Co: ~0.05 wt%; n=10).

Specimens: Except for a few small fragments of the 6.5 kg main mass, all recovered fragments are at NHMD.

Data from:
  MB105
  Table 0
  Line 0:
State/Prov/County:Hovedstaden
Date:2016 Feb 6
Latitude:55°42.02'N
Longitude:12°24.33'E
Mass (g):8938
Pieces:11
Class:H5/6
Shock stage:S2
Weathering grade:W0
Fayalite (mol%):19.3±0.1 (18.8-19.5; n=19)
Ferrosilite (mol%):16.9±0.2 (16.5-17.2; n=21)
Wollastonite (mol%):1.3±0.3 (0.8-1.7; n=21)
Classifier:M.Patzek, A. Bischoff, H. Haack
Type spec mass (g):8938
Type spec location:NHMD
Main mass:NHMD
Finder:Anonymous
Comments:Submitted by Henning Haack
Institutions
   and collections
IfP: Institut für Planetologie, Wilhelm-Klemm-Str. 10, 48149 Münster, Germany (institutional address; updated 23 Jan 2012)
NHMD: Natural History Museum of Denmark, University of Copenhagen, Øster Voldgade 5-7, 1350 Copenhagen K, Denmark. , Denmark; Website (institutional address; updated 17 Aug 2012)
Catalogs:
References: Published in Meteoritical Bulletin, no. 105, MAPS 52, 2411, September 2017. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/maps.12944/full
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Geography:

Denmark
Coordinates:
     Recommended::   (55° 42' 1"N, 12° 24' 20"E)

Statistics:
     This is the only approved meteorite from Hovedstaden, Denmark
     This is 1 of 8 approved meteorites from Denmark (plus 1 unapproved name)
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