Name: REVELSTOKE. The place of fall or discovery: 64 km northwest of the city of Revelstoke, British Columbia, Canada; Lat. = 51°20' N, Long. = 118°57' W. Date of fall or discovery: FALL, March 31, 1965, 21 hrs. 47' Pacific Standard Time. Class and type: STONY, carbonaceous chondrite type I. Number of individual specimens: 4 (two recovered). Total weight: About 1 gr. recovered. Circumstances of the fall or discovery: An extremely bright bolide giving off sparks was observed to travel for 100 km. (8 seconds) at 15° inclination; blue white at high altitudes, it exploded at 30 km. with a brilliant flash of white light, and travelled onward as two or more distinct reddish fireballs which went out at an altitude of 12 km. over a very wild and desolate range of glaciated mountains and spruce forest. Violent detonations were heard up to 130 km. from the fall area and were recorded on four seismographs as much as 400 km. distant. Search by plane and helicopter immediately after the fall was unsuccessful, but two guides and trappers living ten km. south of the fall area in the course of their spring trapping operations for beaver, observed two impact areas on the ice of a small lake, and another two in the snow of the neighbouring forest. These small fragments lay directly along the trace of trajectory plotted by Drs. J. Galt and E. Argyle of the Dominion Radio Astro Physical Laboratory at Penticton, British Columbia, and L. Bayrock of the Research Council of Alberta, Edmonton. Two of the samples of disaggregated meteorite were collected, the other two were lost on melting of the lake and snow. Identification was made at the, University of Alberta and confirmed by the Geological Survey of Canada, Ottawa. Search for the main mass or masses is continuing, using air photographs taken shortly after the fall and helicopters to support ground search. Source (PDF)
Title: Revelstoke, a new Type I carbonaceous chondrite Authors: Folinsbee, R. E.; Douglas, J. A. V.; Maxwell, J. A.
The Revelstoke meteorite fell on March 31, 1965 in a desolate glaciated mountain-area in southeast British Columbia. Visual observations indicate that the bolide travelled along an azimuth of 093 at an inclination to the horizontal of 15°. About l g of disaggregated material was recovered from the snow on a small frozen lake lying along the trace of the trajectory. This material was initially identified as a Type I carbonaceous chondrite by direct comparison by X-ray fluorescence spectroscopy with the Orgueil meteorite. Textural and mineralogical relationships in Revelstoke closely resemble those of Alais and Orgueil. The chemical composition of Revelstoke is similar to that of Orgueil.
Early on the clear night of March 31, 1965, thousands of people in British Columbia and Alberta saw the explosion of a large meteor about 30 km up, somewhere above the town of Revelstoke, 280 km west of Calgary. Canadians heard a detonation as far as 200 km away. An Air Canada pilot reported the event from 800 km away while flying westward over Saskatchewan. Scientists recorded atmospheric pressure waves caused by the blast in Boulder, Colorado. Researchers later analysed the recordings and found the blast had an energy of about 20 kilotons, about equal to the Nagasaki bomb in 1945. Read more (PDF)