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Millbillillie (meteorite)

Millbillillie
MillbillillieMeteorite.jpg
A 175 grams (6.2 oz) individual of the Millbillillie meteorite shower, a eucrite achondrite that fell in Australia in 1960. This specimen is approx. 6 centimetres (2.4 in) wide. Note the shiny black fusion crust with flow lines. The chip at lower right allows one to see the light-gray interior. The orange staining at top is a result of weathering, as these stones were not recovered until many years after they fell.
Type Achondrite
Clan HED meteorites
Group Eucrite
Parent body Possibly 4 Vesta
Country Australia
Region Millbillillie & Jundee Stations, Wiluna district, Western Australia
Coordinates 26°27′S 120°22′E / 26.450°S 120.367°E / -26.450; 120.367Coordinates: 26°27′S 120°22′E / 26.450°S 120.367°E / -26.450; 120.367
Observed fall Yes
Fall date 1960-10
Found date 1970
TKW 330 kilograms (730 lb)
Strewn field Yes
Meteorite oriented Millbillillie.jpg
77 grams (2.7 oz) oriented specimen of the Millbillillie eucrite meteorite.
Commons page

Millbillillie meteorite is a meteorite named after the cattle station in Australia on which it fell in October 1960. It is classified as a eucrite achondrite, a kind of stony meteorite.

A fireball was observed "with sparks coming off it" by two stationworkers while they were opening a gate in the boundary fence on a track between Millbillillie and Jundee cattle stations. The object fell on a plain to the north. No search was made at the time but in 1970 and 1971 locals found two stones; Aboriginals have found others since. The largest stone weighed 20 kilograms (44 lb). It and a smaller one of 565 grams (19.9 oz) are held by the Western Australian Museum.

As of January 2013 pieces of Millbillillie were on sale for around US$22/g.


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