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In Collection : 12.43g individual (100% crusted)
In Collection : 14.35g individual (100% crusted)
In Collection : 21.42g individual (100% crusted)
In Collection : 42g individual (100% crusted)
In Collection : 46g individual (100% crusted)
In Collection : 80g individual (100% crusted)
This write-up was originally printed in Meteoritical
Bulletin 83:
©Meteoritical Society
From MB39:
GAO, a village about 60 km N of the town of Leo, Upper
Volta; f = 11°391N, ? = 2°11'W.
FALL, March 5, 1960, about 1700 hours.
STONY, olivine-bronzite chondrite.
At least 16 stones were recovered, the largest weighing 2.5 kg;
1 kg in U.S. National Museum (Washington, USA).
From MB57:
FALL OF THE GUENIE, UPPER VOLTA, STONY METEORITE
Name: GUENIE
Place of fall: Upper Volta
Date of fall: April, 1960.
Class and type: Stone. Olivine-bronzite chondrite (H4). Olivine
Fa18-20.
Number of individual specimens: A shower, total number not known.
Total weight: Not known, 3.6 kg, four stones, in Paris (Natural
History Museum).
Circumstances of fall: Not reported.
Source: M. Bourot et al, 1975. Guenie and Tillaberi: Descriptions
of two chondrites fallen in Africa. Meteoritics 10, 368 (abs.).
See also M. Bourot, 1976. Etude mineralogique de la meteorite
de Guenie. 3rd cycle thesis, University of Paris VI.
From MB83:
Gao-Guenie, new name With the recent paper by Bourot-Denise
et al. (1998), the Meteorite Nomenclature Committee has decided
that a new, collective name, Gao-Guenie, will be bestowed upon
all meteorites formerly identified as either Gao (Upper Volta)
(frequently truncated to Gao) or Guenie. It had been reported
that two meteorite showers occurred one month apart in 1960 in
the country now known as Burkina Faso. But the new work confirms
long-held suspicions that the two meteorites are indistinguishable
from each other and that there was most likely only one fall (1960
March 5). The confusion about this meteorite has been compounded
by the fact that new stones continue to be found ~40 years after
the fall and are given arbitrarily one or the other name. Henceforth,
the official name for all meteorites from this shower will be
Gao-Guenie, with the names Gao (Upper Volta) and Guenie as recognized
synonyms.
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