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The Villalbeto de la Peña meteorite fall: I. Fireball energy, meteorite recovery, strewn field, and petrography

Authors :
Jordi Llorca
Ignasi Casanova
Otto Eugster
Matthias Laubenstein
Jose Luis Ortiz
Javier García-Guinea
José A. Docobo
Alan E. Rubin
Wayne N. Edwards
A. J. Castro-Tirado
Josep M. Trigo-Rodríguez
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Wiley, 2005.

Abstract

An impressive daylight fireball was observed from Spain, Portugal, and the south of France at 16h46m45s UTC on January 4, 2004. The meteoroid penetrated into the atmosphere, generating shock waves that reached the ground and produced audible booms. The associated airwave was recorded at a seismic station located 90 km north of the fireball trajectory in Spain, and at an infrasound station in France located 750 km north-east of the fireball. The absolute magnitude of the bolide has been determined to be -18 ± 1 from a casual video record. The energy released in the atmosphere determined from photometric, seismic, and infrasound data was about 0.02 kilotons (kt). A massive fragmentation occurred at a height of 28 ± 0.2 km, resulting in a meteorite strewn field of 20 ± 6 km. The first meteorite specimen was found on January 11, 2004, near the village of Villalbeto de la Pena, in northern Palencia (Spain). To date, about 4.6 kg of meteorite mass have been recovered during several recovery campaigns. The meteorite is a moderately shocked (S4) L6 ordinary chondrite with a cosmic-ray-exposure age of 48 ± 5 Ma. Radioisotope analysis shows that the original body had a mass of 760 ± 150 kg, which is in agreement with the estimated mass obtained from photometric and seismic measurements.

Details

ISSN :
19455100 and 10869379
Volume :
40
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Meteoritics & Planetary Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0cc425fa0e8797bc25d7787b9de94b53