Name: Miller Range 15362 This is an OFFICIAL meteorite name. Abbreviation: MIL 15362 Observed fall: No Year found: 2015 Country: Antarctica [Collected by US Antarctic Search for Meteorites program (ANSMET)] Mass: 42.6 g
The exterior has 60% black/brown fusion crust with oxidation haloes, and rust. Exposed surfaces are brown with inclusions/chondrules visible. The interior is weathered brown with metal and some rusty/weathered inclusions/chondrules.
Thin Section Description (,2) - Cari Corrigan, Tim McCoy
The section exhibits numerous small, well-defined chondrules up to 1.5 mm in a black matrix of fine grained silicates, metal and troilite. Polysynthetically twinned pyroxene is abundant. The meteorite is moderately weathered. Olivine is Fa16, pyroxene is Fs9-26. The meteorite is a low FeO chondrite of type 4 (Russell et al. MAPS 1998). The meteorite is similar in mineral compositions to Willaroy and Suwahib (Buwah).
JSC: Mailcode XI, 2101 NASA Parkway, NASA Johnson Space Center, Houston, TX 77058, United States; Website (institutional address; updated 28 Jul 2022) SI: Department of Mineral Sciences, NHB-119, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC 20560, United States; Website (institutional address; updated 16 Jan 2012)
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