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Brachina meteorite

Brachina meteorite
Type Primitive achondrite
Class Asteroidal achondrite
Group Brachinite
Composition olivine, plagioclase, clinopyroxene, iron-sulfide, chromite, chlorapatite, pentlandite, meteoric iron, melt inclusions
Country Australia
Region South Australia
Coordinates 31°18′00″S 138°23′00″E / 31.300000°S 138.383333°E / -31.300000; 138.383333Coordinates: 31°18′00″S 138°23′00″E / 31.300000°S 138.383333°E / -31.300000; 138.383333
Observed fall No
Found date 26 May 1974
TKW 202.85 grams (7.155 oz) (2 fragments)

The Brachina meteorite is the type specimen of the brachinites class of the asteroidal achondrites.

The meteorite is named after Brachina in South Australia. Two fragments (total 200 g) were found by B.M. Eves at 31°18′00″S 138°23′00″E / 31.300000°S 138.383333°E / -31.300000; 138.383333 on 26 May 1974.

The mineral composition of the Brachina meteorite is olivine (80%), plagioclase (10%), Clinopyroxene (5.5%), iron-sulfide (3%), chromite (0.5%), chlorapatite (0.5%) and pentlandite (0.3%) and traces of meteoric iron. Melt inclusions consist of glass with orthopyroxene and anorthoclase. The chemical and mineralogical composition is similar to the Chassigny meteorite, but the trace elements are fundamentally different.

Melt inclusions indicate that there were melting processes active on the brachinite parent body.

The meteorite was classified as a chassignite in 1978, but in 1983 trace element analysis showed that the Brachina meteorite was fundamentally different from Chassigny. It was therefore proposed that the meteorite should be the type specimen of a new meteorite class, the brachinites. This classification has remained valid since then.


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