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Bondoc   contributed by Zsolt Kereszty, IMCA 6251   MetBul Link


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What is a thin section?       What do all the colors mean?    
  Mesosiderite-B4

TKW 888.6 kg. Observed fall: no. Found 1956, Bondoc Peninsula, Luzon Island, the Philippines.

One of only three meteorites in this class.

Zsolt writes:
Thin Section of a Bondoc pyroxen nodule meteorite.

The nodule is fine- to coarse-grained, dull green, and roughly lenticular. The boundary with the Bondoc matrix is sharp. The nodule is a monomict breccia containing low-Ca pyroxene, with medium- to fine-grained plagioclase, abundant <1-mm silicate-opaque assemblages, and sparse Ca phosphates. No olivine was encountered. The silicate-opaque inclusions consist of one or more of the following - kamacite, taenite, troilite, an unidentified Fe silicate, chromite-spinel, Ca phosphate, and a silica phase. Fe-Ni metal and Fe sulfide occurs as up to 1-mm masses and veins through and around silicate grains.


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Vouillé
Anne Black

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5 pictures in the Queue
Zsolt Kereszty
 7/31/2015 5:38:08 PM
Yes Anne its yours:) My one of the favorite Thin Section. Fully colorfull and quality the polish
Anne Black
 7/31/2015 12:22:49 PM
I think I know this thin-section!! ;-) And I am glad to see that you looked at it and like it.
 

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