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Meteorites from mars and moon going up for sale next month | Fragments of Mars, the moon and asteroids that have fallen to Earth will be put up for sale on October 14 in Manhattan. More than 125 items will be displayed in what auction house Heritage
Auctions is claiming as the largest public meteorite auction ever held. Taken
together, every single meteorite known to exist would weigh significantly less
than the world’s annual output of gold, said Darryl Pitt, the meteorite consultant
for the auction. This sale includes material from six meteorites that originated
on large asteroid Vesta, Live Science reported. Bits of Mars and the moon are
much more rare, but they, too, have been launched by asteroid impacts. About 150
pounds (68 kilograms) of moon meteorites are known to exist, and none has been
found in Europe or the Americas . About one-quarter, however, have been found
by scientists on the cold desert of Antarctica , according to auction materials.
Mars' rocks present a particular challenge to identify, because humans haven't
been able to bring Martian rocks back to Earth, as has happened with moon rocks.
However, scientists do know the composition of Mars' atmosphere, and they have
matched it to the composition of pockets of gas contained in some meteorites,
confirming their Martian origin. Next month's auction is slated to feature meteorites
from both places, including a fragment of the Tissint meteorite, which fell in
Morocco in July 2011; the fragment came from a larger specimen owned by the Natural
History Museum of London. The auction also includes two halves from a 4-pound
(1.8-kilogram) lunar meteorite that is the fourth largest available for private
ownership. A meteorite has no value until it has been authenticated by meteoriticist,
a scientist who studies meteorites. To examine a meteorite, a meteoriticist must
look at the rock's internal matrix by cutting away a piece. As a result, all meteorites
must be cut, except those that fall as part of the same meteor shower, Pitt said.
A description of the meteorite and its name are then published. A backstory can
also make a meteorite more valuable to collectors; for instance, meteorites seen
falling from the sky are more valuable than those discovered only after they are
on the ground, Pitt said. The auction is scheduled to take place on Sunday (Oct.
14) at the Fletcher-Sinclair Mansion at 2 East 79th Street , Manhattan.
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