The Mbale Meteorite Shower
Abstract
On 1992 August 14 at 12:40 UTC, an ordinary chondrite of type L5/6 entered the atmosphere over Mbale, Uganda, broke up, and caused a strewn field of size 3 x 7 km. Shortly after the fall, an expedition gathered eye witness accounts and located the position of 48 impacts of masses between 0.19 and 27.4 kg. Short-lived radionuclide data were measured for two specimens, one of which was only 12 days after the fall. Subsequent recoveries of fragements has resulted in a total of 863 mass estimates by 1993 October. The surfaces of all fragments contain fusion crust. The meteorite shower caused some minor inconveniences. Most remarkably, a young boy was hit on the head by a small specimen. The data interpreted as to indicate that the meteorite had an initial mass between 400-1000 kg (most likely approximately 1000 kg) and approached Mbale from AZ = 185 +/- 15, H = 55 +/- 15, and Vinfinity = 13.5 +/- 1.5/s. Orbital elements are given. Fragmentation of the initial mass started probably above 25 km altitude, but the final catastrophic breakup occurred at an altitude of 10-14 km. An estimated 190 +/- 40 kg reached the Earth's surface minutes after the final breakup of which 150 kg of material has been recovered.
- Publication:
-
Meteoritics
- Pub Date:
- March 1994
- DOI:
- 10.1111/j.1945-5100.1994.tb00678.x
- Bibcode:
- 1994Metic..29..246J
- Keywords:
-
- Chondrites;
- Grain Size;
- Meteoritic Microstructures;
- Meteoroid Showers;
- Orbital Elements;
- Particle Size Distribution;
- Radioactive Isotopes;
- Uganda;
- METEORITES;
- MBALE;
- STONY METEORITES;
- ORDINARY CHONDRITES;
- CHONDRITES;
- L CHONDRITES;
- DESCRIPTION;
- STREWN FIELD;
- METEORITE FALL;
- CLASSIFICATION;
- SAMPLES;
- METEORITE;
- RADIONUCLIDES;
- MASS;
- ORBITAL ELEMENTS;
- GRS;
- ORBIT;
- FRAGMENTATION;
- MICROPROBE METHODS;
- SPECTROSCOPY;
- LABORATORY STUDIES;
- Lunar and Planetary Exploration; Meteorites;
- Meteorites;
- Named