.85" Howardite Meteorite (4.6 g) - Bechar 008

This is a .85" wide (4.6 grams) fragment of the HED howardite meteorite Bechar 008, found in 2022 in Algeria.

Bechar is the name given to a larger group of lunar meteorites, but Bechar 008 is an exception: it is a howardite meteorite, one of the three HED-type achondrites that hail from the micro-planet 4 Vesta in the asteroid belt! Bechar 008 was found in the Algerian desert in 2022, and 1.7 kilograms of it were later purchased in Mauritania.

Bechar 008 is a polymict breccia characterized by lithic clasts of pyroxene-rich, eucritic gabbros and granulites. These gorgeous, multicolored clasts are suspended in a fine-grained matrix colored a darker brown-gray.

Howardite - Fragments Of The 4 Vesta Minor Planet

Howardite is the name given to a type of achondritic meteorite that originated from the giant asteroid (or minor planet) 4 Vesta, the second-largest object in the asteroid belt. They were ejected from its surface during impacts from smaller asteroids. How many people know there is a minor planet called 4 Vesta in our solar system, let alone that pieces of it have landed on Earth? It is one of just seven bodies in the solar system of which humans have physical samples.

4 Vesta, or simply Vesta, is the second-largest object in the asteroid belt, with a mean diameter of about 525 kilometers, or 326 miles, and an elliptical shape. It is so large it is classified as a minor planet, falling just short of the dwarf planet designation. Vesta is likely the remnant of a destroyed planet, since it still retains a differentiated interior, just like the layers of Earth and other rocky planets. It is also the brightest asteroid visible from Earth, and can be seen with the naked eye.

A true color image of 4 Vesta taken by NASA's Dawn probe in July of 2011.
A true color image of 4 Vesta taken by NASA's Dawn probe in July of 2011.


Howardites themselves have numerous unique characteristics that make them stand out from other meteorites. They are a eucrite and diogenite-rich regolith breccia, although carbonaceous chondrules and impact melt can also occur. Like other brecciated achondrites, the rock formed from impact ejecta, but howardites were buried by newer impacts and lithified due to the pressure from overlying layers, and ejected again with a later impact. Regolith breccias are not found on Earth: bodies with atmospheres do not produce them. Thus, they are some of the most important materials for studying the makeup of Vesta and other asteroids in the Asteroid Belt.
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DETAILS
TYPE
HED Achondrite (Howardite)
LOCATION
Bechar, Algeria
SIZE
.85 x .62 x .42", Weight: 4.6 grams
ITEM
#286983