header
  Home     News & Events     Publications     Membership     Resources     Search       Contact us      
Search the Meteoritical Bulletin Database
Last update: 1 Feb 2010
Search for: Search type: Search limits: Display: Publication:
Names
Text help
Places
Classes
Contains
Starts with
Exact
Sounds like
NonAntarctic
Falls
What's new
  in the last:
Limit to approved meteorite names
Search text:  
Millbillillie
Basic information Name: Millbillillie
     This is an OFFICIAL meteorite name.
Abbreviation: There is no official abbreviation for this meteorite.
Observed fall: Yes
Year fell: 1960
Country: Australia
Mass:help 330 kg
Classification
  history:
Meteoritical Bulletin:  MB 51  (1972)  Eucrite
NHM Catalogue:  5th Edition  (2000)  Eucrite
MetBase:  v. 7.1  (2006)  Eucrite-mmict
Recommended:  Eucrite-mmict    [explanation]

This is 1 of 85 approved meteorites classified as Eucrite-mmict.   [show all]
Search for other: Achondrites, Eucrites, and HED achondrites
Writeuphelp
Writeup from MB 51:
Warning: the following text was scanned and may contain character recognition errors. Refer to the original to be sure of accuracy.

FALL OF THE MILLBILLILLIE, WESTERN AUSTRALIA, STONY METEORITE

Name: MILLBILLILLIE

Place: On Millbillillie and Jundee Stations, Wiluna district, Western Australia.

26° 27'S, 120° 22'E.

Date of fall: October, 1960. Day unknown, but about 1 p.m. local time (0500 GMT). Recovered 1970.

Class and type: Stone. Eucrite.

Number of individual specimens: At least 3

Total weight: At least 25.4 kg

Circumstances of fall: Station workers, F. Vicenti and F. Quadrio, observed a fireball while opening a gate in the boundary fence on the Millbillillie - Jundee track. An object "with sparks coming off it" fell into a spinifex plain to their north. No search was initiated, but D. Vicenti and M. Finch found two stones in this plain in 1970 and 1971. Aboriginals have since found others. The largest stone (20 kg) and one smaller one (565 g) are in the Western Australian Museum.

Source: Dr. R. A. Binns, Department of Geology, University of Western Australia.

Catalogs:
Search for specimens in the Smithsonian Institution collection (U.S.):   
    Require SI photo
Search for this meteorite in the Natural History Museum collection (U.K.):   
    Require NHM photo
Search for this meteorite in the Museo Nazionale dell'Antartide database (Siena, Italy):   
References: Published in Meteoritical Bulletin, no. 51, Meteoritics 7, 215-232 (1972)
Find references in NASA ADS:
Find references in Google Scholar:
Photos:
CreditPhotos
Photos from the Encyclopedia of Meteorites:
Mike Farmer   
Mile High Meteorite      
Photograph by Geoffrey Notkin © Oscar E. Monnig Meteorite Gallery   
Photos uploaded by members of the Encyclopedia of Meteorites.
    (Caution, these are of unknown reliability)
Achim Raphael      
akira1988   
ale bartolommei-giulio M.   
André Knöfel   
Auricular      
David Hardy   
Dirk Hohmann            
eraserhead   
Franco Vignato   
Gaetan Cormier   
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites, Impactites, & Trinitite   
Gerald Armstrong   
harlan trammell   
ironee   
Jacek Szkatula   
Jay Piatek   
Jim K   
MeteoriteCollector.org - AMNH   
MeteoriteCollector.org - FCOM                  
Michael S. Scherman         
Michel Girard   
Mike Smith   
Peter Marmet      
Phil Schmitz                        
Philippe Thomas   
Pierre-Marie Pele (Meteor-Center)         
rudi_siegerland   
Svend Buhl      
t.czarnecki   
tett   
Troy Carroll   
Woreczko Jan & Wadi               
Geography:

Australia
Coordinates:
     Catalogue of Meteorites:   (26° 27'S, 120° 22'E)
     Recommended::   (26° 27'S, 120° 22'E)

Statistics:
     This is 1 of 321 approved meteorites from Western Australia, Australia (plus 1 unapproved name) (plus 11 impact craters)
     This is 1 of 608 approved meteorites from Australia (plus 46 unapproved names) (plus 26 impact craters)
Proximity search:
Find nearby meteorites: enter search radius (km):
Synonyms: Nabberu (In NHM Cat)

Direct link to this page