made from a
narwhal tusk with an iron head made from the
Cape York meteorite. Before the advent of iron
smelting, meteoric iron was the only source of iron metal apart from minor amounts of
telluric iron. Meteoric iron was already used before the beginning of the
Iron Age to make cultural objects, tools and weapons.
Bronze Age Many examples of iron working from the
Bronze Age have been confirmed to be meteoritic in origin. Dated to around 3200 BC,
geochemical analysis of the Gerzeh iron beads, based on the ratio of nickel to iron and
cobalt, confirms that the iron was meteoritic in origin. • In
Mesopotamia,
Sumer and
Akkadian Empire, meteoric iron was considered a sacred material, used to create special ritual objects, and used long before the systematic processing of terrestrial iron. There was a special term for it, an-bar. • Dated to around 2500 BC, an iron dagger from
Alaca Höyük was confirmed to be meteoritic in origin through geochemical analysis. • Dated to around 900 BC, an
arrowhead from
Mörigen in Switzerland was confirmed to be made of meteoric iron whose composition suggested that it originated from the
Kaali meteorite crater in
Saaremaa, Estonia.
The Americas • The
Inuit used parts of the
Cape York meteorite to make knives, harpoon tips, and lance heads. Large quantities of meteoric iron were known and used long before European contact.
Africa • Fragments from the
Gibeon meteorite were used for centuries by the
Nama people of Namibia.
Asia • There are reports of the use of meteorites for manufacture of various items in Tibet (see
Thokcha). *The
Iron Man, a purported Tibetan Buddhist statue of
Vaiśravaṇa, was likely carved from an ataxite meteorite. It has been speculated that it may be made from a fragment of the
Chinga meteorite. Even after the invention of
smelting, meteoric iron was sometimes used where this technology was not available or metal was scarce. A piece of the
Cranbourne meteorite was made into a horseshoe around 1854. Today meteoritic iron is used in niche jewellery and knife production, but most of it is used for research, educational or
collecting purposes. ==Atmospheric phenomena==