How do you know it’s a meteorite?
I’ve been looking at these things for so
long, it is hard to remember the time I was asking the same question.
For now, let’s stick with Brenham Pallasite
Meteorites.
OK, you located a place where iron or
stony-iron meteorites have been found, you got a signal with the metal
detector, you start digging and it’s not the usual piece of trash. But to most people it just looks like a rock
with some dirt stuck to it:

Must have metal in it, right? You can test the metal and it contains
Nickel, rare in Earth rock, common in meteorites.
You cut the specimen and see what it looks
like inside (need to use a diamond or CBN saw because it is so hard):

OK, that’s different; the rock has shinny
metal in it and some other material. A
magnet sticks to it-this rules out lead, aluminum was
never an issue because the material is very heavy, it rusts, all roads lead to
iron. The metal is a mixture of mostly
iron, some nickel and many trace elements (need a special laboratory to
determine this, a good university can help).
A
rock with iron, ever seen this before?
If so, it was probably a meteorite.
Many billions of years ago Earth rock had iron in it but after the
action of oxygen and water it has been converted to iron oxide. Conversion of iron oxide (hematite,
magnetite) back to iron is accomplished using a blast furnace at a foundry.
Anything unusual about
the metal? If you etch the metal phase you get this:

It’s like developing a negative to get a
photograph. The lines in the triangular
region are called the Widmanstatten Pattern.
It is a crystalline phase of iron and nickel that took a million years
to cool only 3 degrees in temperature-you don’t find this in man made metal
because we don’t have any foundries that have been in business for millions of
years. In the upper left corner is a
band of swathing (means surrounding) kamacite. The shiny veins are plessite,
a granular form of the iron-nickel.
What’s the other stuff? Turns out to be olivine, a
type of rock that is found on Earth.
The more crystalline form is transparent and is know as peridot and is used to make jewelry. Some Brenham has green peridot
crystals:

So, that’s how we know it is a
meteorite. The knowledge gained from
countless scientists over the last few hundred years allows us to look at this
material and understand what it truly is, a meteorite from the asteroid belt.
I used to hang around
Copyright d.i.stimpson
2007