Abstract is: An iron meteorite fell on the Sikhote-Alin Mountains, in southeastern Russia, in 1947. Large iron meteorite falls have been witnessed and fragments recovered but never before, in recorded history, a fall of this magnitude. An estimated 23 tonnes of fragments survived the fiery passage through the atmosphere and reached the Earth.
(P625, lat/long) | 46.16 / 134.653333333 |
iron meteorite | Q827989 |
P646 | Freebase ID | /m/04698j |
P2924 | Great Russian Encyclopedia Online ID (old version) | 3667045 |
P8189 | J9U ID | 987007543758205171 |
P244 | Library of Congress authority ID | sh85122442 |
P824 | Meteoritical Bulletin Database ID | 23593 |
P65 | site of astronomical discovery | Primorsky Krai | Q4341 |
Soviet Union | Q15180 | ||
P575 | time of discovery or invention | 1947-01-01 |
Q81169540 | "Ages" of the Sikhote Alin Iron Meteorite |
Q123572224 | Comparative study of Aliskerovo, Anyujskij, Sikhote-Alin and Sterlitamak iron meteorites using Mössbauer spectroscopy |
Q56483983 | Hydrothermal modification of the Sikhote-Alin iron meteorite under low pH geothermal environments. A plausibly prebiotic route to activated phosphorus on the early Earth |
Q56431254 | Sobolevskiy meteorite crater (Sikhote-Alin' Range) |
Q109302104 | The Great Meteor of 1947 / Otto Struve. - (06.1950) |
Q29789792 | Sikhote-Alin meteorite-AMGL 53540/53541 | part of | P361 |
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