Peekskill meteorite

The Peekskill meteorite is the object resulting from a well-documented meteorite event that occurred in October, 1992, in Peekskill, New York, USA. Sixteen separate video recordings document the meteorite burning through the Earth's atmosphere, whereupon it struck a parked car in Peekskill. The Peekskill meteorite is an H6 monomict breccia; its filigreed texture is the result of the shocking and heating following the impact of two asteroids in outer space. The meteorite is of the stony variety, and approximately 20% of its mass is tiny flakes of nickel-iron. When it struck Earth, the meteorite weighed 27.7 lb and measured one foot (0.30 m) in diameter. The Peekskill meteorite is estimated to be 4.4 billion years old.

Descent
The meteorite fell on October 9, 1992 – an event witnessed by thousands across the East Coast. Numerous residents of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C. described the "huge greenish fireball." The meteorite broke up over Kentucky and passed over West Virginia and Pennsylvania on its north-northeast trajectory before striking a parked 1980 red Chevy Malibu at approximately 7:50 pm EDT. After traveling through space at a cosmic velocity of 8.8 miles per second (14 km/s, 31,600 miles per hour), the meteorite at impact had slowed to 164 mph.

Video
As the meteorite fell on a Friday evening, its descent was captured on video by many high school football fans taping local games. The descent was filmed by 16 different cameras. Only a handful of meteorite falls have been caught on film, and only the 2013 Russian meteor event was captured from more angles and localities. The multiple perspectives provided scientists with the ability to calculate the meteorite's flight path to Earth.

Impact
After having been slowed by the Earth's atmosphere, the meteorite was traveling at approximately 164 mph at impact. The Peekskill meteorite smashed through the trunk of a red 1980 Chevrolet Malibu and narrowly missed the gas tank, finally coming to rest in an impact pit beneath the car. Seventeen-year-old Michelle Knapp, the car's owner, heard the collision from inside her home. She later described the sound as "like a three-car crash". Hurrying outside to investigate the noise, Knapp found her car smashed and the meteorite weighing 27.28 lb, still warm and smelling of sulfur, beneath it.





Specimens
Knapp retrieved the meteorite, after which it was sold to a consortium of three dealers for $50,000. Today, small specimens of the Peekskill meteorite sell for approximately $125 per gram.

Knapp had just purchased the car for $300. Immediately following the extraterrestrial impact, the vehicle was sold to Iris Lang, wife of renowned meteorite collector and dealer Al Lang, for $25,000. Since then, it has been on display in numerous museums throughout the world, including New York City's American Museum of Natural History and France's National Museum of Natural History.

The car, as well as the main mass of the meteorite (which currently weighs 890 grams), are now in the Macovich Collection of Meteorites. Additional specimens of the meteorite can be found in Chicago's Field Museum, the American National History Museum, the Smithsonian, and Los Angeles' Griffith Observatory.