full slice Although pallasites are a rare meteorite type, enough pallasite material is found in museums and meteorite collections and is available for research. This is due to several large finds, some of which yielded more than a metric ton. The following are the largest finds: •
Brenham, southwest
Kansas, United States. In 1890 the find of about 20 masses with a total weight of around the shallow
Haviland Crater were reported. More masses were found later, including one of from a depth of , the total amounting to about . A piece of is in the
Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago. In 2005, Steve Arnold of Arkansas, USA, and Phil Mani of Texas, USA, unearthed a large mass of and in 2006 several new large masses Don Stimpson and Sheila Knepper have found approximately 8,000 lbs. of the Brenham meteorite on their farm property. •
Huckitta,
Northern Territory, Australia. A mass of was found in 1937 on a cattle station north-east of Alice Springs. Earlier, in 1924, a transported piece of about had been found on Burt Plain north of Alice Springs. •
Fukang,
Xinjiang Province, China. A mass of was recovered in 2000. •
Imilac,
Atacama Desert,
Chile; known since 1822. Numerous masses up to were found, the total weight is about 920 kg. •
Brahin,
Gomel Region,
Belarus, known since 1810. Many masses were found strewn in a field, with a total weight of about 820 kg. An additional mass of 227 kg was found at a depth of in 2002. •
Esquel,
Chubut,
Argentina. A large mass of 755 kg was found embedded in soil before 1951. •
Pallasovka,
Pallasovka, Russia. A single mass of 198 kg was found near Pallasovka, Russia in 1990. Coincidentally, both the town of Pallasovka and pallasite meteorites were named after the naturalist, Peter Pallas. •
Krasnojarsk,
Yeniseisk, Russia. A mass of about 700 kg was detected in 1749 about south of Krasnojarsk. It was seen by
P. S. Pallas in 1772 and transported to Krasnojarsk (see above). The main mass of 515 kg is now in Moscow at the Academy of Sciences. Pallasites are named after Peter Pallas for his study of this meteorite. •
Seymchan, discovered near the town by the same name, in far eastern Russia in 1967. This main group Pallasite has some areas free of olivine crystals, and may have formed near the junction of the core and the mantle of an asteroid. Multiple masses in excess of 1 tonne have been recovered. == Notes ==