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Meteorite Sterling Silver Bracelet: Campo del Cielo

$345.00

A meteorite bracelet featuring Campo del Cielo meteorites, which struck the Earth 4000-6000 years ago in Argentina, linked  together with sterling silver into a bracelet with a sterling silver toggle clasp.

Adjustable length approx. 6 1/2 – 7 1/2″.  Meteorite dimensions roughly: 3/8″ x 1/4″ each

Photo is sample.

1 in stock (can be backordered)

Meteorite

Meteorites are rocks that fall to the earth's surface from space. Often originating from asteroid and comet fragments that travel through space till crossing our planetary path, as the effects of gravity pull the meteoroid enough to fall through the planet's atmosphere.

Meteors, also known as shooting stars, are the streaks of light created by the gasses held within meteoroids burning in the Earth's atmosphere. Some of the fastest meteors travel at speeds of 44 miles (70km) per second. These amazing space rocks are then considered meteorites when they crash to earth as the final bang!

Metaphysically meteorites connect us to the flow of the universe, connecting to other dimensions, and communicating with others.

Location: Campo del Cielo, Gran Chaco Gualamba, Argentina.

Structural Class: Coarse octahedrite, OG, Widmanstatten bandwidth 3.0  ±0.6 mm

Chemical Class: Group 1, 6.68% Ni, 0.43% Co, 0.25% P, 87 ppm Ga, 407 ppm, Ge, 3.6 ppm Ir

Time of Fall: 4,000 – 6,000 years ago

The first record of the Campo meteorite was in 1576. A Spanish governor learned of deposits of iron from the Indians who reportedly believed that it had fallen from heaven. The location of the find was the Campo del Cielo (field of the sky or heaven), a fitting name for the location of a meteorite. Since the Indians believed that the irons fell from heaven the name may have come from the meteorites. Carbon dating of charred wood found in impact craters is consistent with an Indian oral tradition of the time the irons fell from heaven.  The area in which the meteorites are found is an open brush-covered plain that has little water and no other rocks, which is very good country in which to locate meteorites.  The larger meteorites are found in and around a series of small craters in the southwestern part of the strewn field. The largest crater measures 78x65 meters. The smallest being around 56 meters. All together, searchers have found at least 12 craters.

 

Additional information

Weight 1.25 oz

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