Ribbeck meteorite from the Havelland is 4.5 billion years old
Researchers from the University of Münster analysed 202 fragments
At the beginning of this year, on 21 January, a huge fireball was visible over the German state of Brandenburg. It was the result of a small celestial body entering the Earth’s atmosphere, bursting and falling to the ground in numerous fragments near Ribbeck in the Havelland. After hundreds of people set out in the days that ensued to search for the remains of the crashed body, researchers led by Professor Dr Addi Bischoff and Dr Markus Patzek from the Institute of Planetology at the University of Münster were able to examine the finds. The two scientists and nearly 30 other colleagues from five countries have published their findings in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science under the title “Cosmic pears from the Havelland (Germany): Ribbeck, the twelfth recorded aubrite fall in history”. The “cosmic pears” allude to the famous poem “Herr von Ribbeck auf Ribbeck im Havelland” by Theodor Fontane and the pears that the eponymous character distributes.
When the meteorite fragments were found, they had an intense odour of hydrogen sulphide – similar to the smell of rotten eggs. Although the individual fragments had only been exposed to the damp environment of snow and subsequent thaw for a few days, chemical reactions between the mineral phases and the moisture took place immediately after the fall, causing the odour and altering the original mineralogy of the rock. Certain mineral phases in the meteorite cannot form under terrestrial conditions and are unstable, i.e. they react with the terrestrial moisture and water and disintegrate.
Original publication
Bischoff, Patzek et al., 2024: Cosmic pears from the Havelland (Germany): Ribbeck, the twelfth recorded aubrite fall in history. Meteoritics & Planetary Science; DOI: 10.1111/maps.14245.
The open access provision of the article is made possible by the DEAL project of the University of Münster and Wiley.