Mason Gully [coordinates temporarily withheld] Western Australia, Australia Fell: 13 April 2010 at 10h36m10s UTC Classification: Ordinary chondrite (H5) History: A bright fireball was recorded over southwestern Australia by observatories of the Desert Fireball Network. A fall position was pin-pointed by triangulation (Pavel Spurny, CzAS), and a search was mounted (Martin Towner, ICL). A stone was recovered 3rd November 2010 within 150 m of the predicted fall site. Physical characteristics: (Gretchen Benedix, NHM; Philip Bland, Kathryn Dyl, Martin Towner, ICL). An ~3 cm, 50% fusion crusted, 24.54 g stone was recovered. Individual pyroxene, olivine, and feldspar crystals are visible on the broken surface, with no evidence of alteration of silicates. Some rust patches visible around metal grains on original broken surfaces. Although the meteorite appears to have high porosity (based on observations of sawn surfaces), metal in the interior shows no sign of alteration. Fusion crust is black and fresh. Petrography: (Gretchen Benedix, NHM). The meteorite has a typical petrologic type 5 texture, with discernible, but not distinct chondrules. Chondrule types include BO and RP. Minerals are heterogeneously distributed. Modal mineralogy (in vol%) is: olivine 33; orthopyroxene 38; clinopyroxene 5; plagioclase 8; metal 11; sulfide 5; minor components around 1. Source (PDF)
Title: The Mason Gully Meteorite Fall in SW Australia: Fireball Trajectory and Orbit from Photographic Records Authors: Spurnę, P.; Bland, P. A.; Shrbenę, L.; Towner, M. C.; Borovicka, J.; Bevan, A. W. R.; Vaughan, D.
We report a new instrumentally recorded meteorite fall, named Mason Gully, which was recorded by the Desert Fireball Network (DFN), an ambitious project dedicated to mapping of fireballs over the remote area of the Nullarbor Region of SW Australia, a very suitable place for meteorite recoveries. This is the second case of such successful recovery after Bunburra Rockhole, the major milestone of this project .