Bovedy (meteorite)

Summary

Bovedy is a meteorite that fell in the area of Bovedy, Northern Ireland, on 25 April 1969. After entering the atmosphere over the Bristol Channel, it traversed Wales and the Irish Sea before landing near Limavady.[2]

Bovedy
TypeChondrite
ClassOrdinary chondrite
GroupL3
CountryUnited Kingdom
RegionNorthern Ireland
Coordinates54°34′N 6°20′W / 54.567°N 6.333°W / 54.567; -6.333[1]
Observed fallYes
Fall dateApril 1969
TKW5.46 kg

The meteorite had broken into two pieces. One piece smashed through the asbestos roof of a shop in Sprucefield, breaking into two further pieces. A larger piece of the meteorite was recovered days later in a farm field in Bovedy, 60 kilometres (37 mi) away.[3]

Composition and classification edit

The meteorite appeared to be brown and black, but the inside showed grey chondrules with flecks of metal within the meteorite. Before it separated on impact, the first fragment weighed 513g and the second fragment weighed 4,950g.[3]

Bovedy is an ordinary chondrite from the L group that is petrologic type 3.

References edit

  1. ^ Meteoritical Bulletin Database: Bovedy
  2. ^ The day the sky fell in above County Londonderry, Londonderry Sentinel. (retrieved 9 May 2013)
  3. ^ a b "Northern Ireland". The UK and Ireland Meteorite Page. Retrieved November 8, 2015.

External links edit

See also edit