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Post Info TOPIC: Ohaba meteorite


L

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RE: Ohaba meteorite
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L

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Mihály Moldován, Greek Orthodox priest, sleeping in the straw at the entrance of his barn, was raised by a thunderous noise from his sleep. Waking up he saw a fiery body, quickly falling to the earth. The frightened priest lost his consciousness for a few minutes. The fall was also observed by few other people, who spent the night on a nearby hillside together with their cattle. The meteorite was found pierced in the ground of the fruit-garden of Mihály Groszad on the next day. He and the officials of the village examined the miraculous stone, which was handed over by Mr Thalmann, clerk of the village to the district officials at Balázsfalva (now Blaj). Finally Prince Karl Schwarzenberg, Governor of Transylvania ordered to send it to the mineralogical collection of the Court (now Natural History Museum) in Vienna. The finders of the meteorite received a 500-florin reward.
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The Ohaba meteorite fell in October 11, 1857, in Transylvania (Alba District, Romania). After appearance of a fireball, followed by detonations, a stone of 16.25 kg was found by a priest (Graham et al., 1985). The fragments recovered are kept in 16 museums from 11 countries. The Museum of Natural History from Vienna is the repository of the main mass (15.73 kg). The meteorite was previously classified as an H5 veined ordinary chondrite, based on olivine composition Fa20 published by Mason (1963).
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L

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The Ohaba (H5) meteorite fell in Alba, Romania, on the 11th October, 1857.
A total mass of 16.25 kg was recovered.

46° 4'N, 23° 35'E



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