Canon EOS 5D Mark IV
ƒ/10
65 mm
1/160
25600

Vesta is the largest and brightest asteroid in the asteroid belt and the second largest body overall (after the dwarf planet Ceres), with an average diameter of about 525 km (326 miles). That is pretty close to the size of the State of Colorado.

A couple of billion years ago two massive impacts ejected part of Vesta’s mass and some of that material landed here on Earth as HED (howardite, eucrite, and diogenite) meteorites. It’s astonishing to consider that when you look at photographs of Vesta, or eve through a powerful telescope, the actual craters from which the HED meteorites were blasted out can easily be seen, such as Rheasilvia which is over 300 miles wide.

From the Meteorite Bulletin for NWA 7831:

History: Found buried in the ground near Chouichiyat in the Western Sahara on March 3, 2013, and excavated by a team of local people.

Physical characteristics: composed of translucent yellow-green crystals of orthopyroxene with pale orange weathering products along numerous fractures. Much of the material disintegrated into fragments upon excavation.

2 responses to “NWA 7831 Olivine DIogenite — 5x Macro #2”

  1. New 2024 research related to the anorthite contained in some rare Vestian meteorites, like mine here: Meteorite suggests asteroid Vesta may once have had magma lake just like the early moon, say Chinese scientists: "The researchers said that while Vesta is much smaller than the moon and other planets, the “planetary embryo” has a similar evolutionary history to the moon. Anorthosites are formed when magma oceans solidify and the only ones that have previously been found have come from the Earth or the moon."

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