DESERT GLASS FROM THE IMPACT OF AN ASTEROID ON EARTH

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£ 1 750
AuktionsdatumClassic
25.05.2021 13:00UTC +01:00
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CHRISTIE'S
Veranstaltungsort
Vereinigtes Königreich, London
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ID 543550
Los 7 | DESERT GLASS FROM THE IMPACT OF AN ASTEROID ON EARTH
A complete specimen of smoky-yellow Libyan Desert Glass, a natural glass formed from melted sand during an asteroid impact. A pronounced scalloping along the contours, the surfaces are frosted as a result of epochs of sandblasting by desert winds

Formed as the result of sand on Earth melting following an enormously energetic asteroid or comet impact circa 29 million years ago. Closely related to tektites, such silicate glass formations had long been considered a mystery with some researchers believing they had originated on the Moon. More recently, scientists agree these materials (whose name comes from the Greek tektos, meaning “melted”) formed as a result of asteroid impacts with Earth. The extraordinary heat that resulted from such collisions liquefied terrestrial particles. Many tektites were blasted into the atmosphere, and quenched into glass before landing. Tektites are named after the locality in which they are found, hence: Australites, Indochinites, Phillipinites, Moldavites, etc. The higher the silica content of terrestrial impact glass, the lighter the color, and so Libyan Desert Glass — derived from sand and containing 98% silica — is sunny yellow; moldavites from the Czech Republic — with 80% silica — cover a range of greens. Libyan Desert Glass was used to make tools during the Late Pleistocene epoch and was used as jewelry in the Pharaonic Period with examples discovered in Tutankhamun's tomb.
3 x 13/4 x 1in. (7.5 x 4.5 x 2.5cm.)
4in. (10cm.) high on stand

80g.
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