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A meteorite which was discovered in Wiltshire and is considered to be the biggest to have fallen in the UK, is to go on display in Salisbury.

The 200lb (90kg) meteorite is thought to have been found in the 19th Century by Edward Duke, a previous owner of Lake House in Wilsford-cum-Lake.

Experts say the 1.6ft (0.5m) long rock landed on earth about 30,000 years ago.

The Salisbury and South Wiltshire Museum is to display the meteorite for two weeks from Monday.

Experts believe the meteorite, known as a common chondrite, was preserved by the frozen conditions during the last ice age.

Thousands of years later it was built into a stone age burial mound close to Lake House. The local chalk environment would also have helped to preserve it.

It is understood that Duke, a well-known 19th Century archaeologist and excavator of mounds in the area, discovered it.

It sat by the door of Lake House for 80 years before the house was sold.

A Salisbury Museum spokesman said he was "thrilled" to display the meteorite, which has been in storage at the National History Museum for many years.

Source: BBC News


 
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  • 2012-Aug-27
  • Time:
    11:15PM BST
  • Location:
    Caerleon, Newport, Wales NP18 1NT
  • Report:
    FIREBALL SIGHTING JEFF PRESTON 11:15PM (BST) MON AUG 27 2012 CAERLEON NEWPORT WALES UK NP18 1NT Whilst looking Northeast. Path was W to E, beginning NW and ending ENE. It ran below the "W" of Cassiopeia and ended just after passing from left to right below it. Path was about 60 degrees elevation down to around 40. Approx 10 times brighter than Venus - am amateur astronomer - I know how bright Venus is. Flight path about 3 seconds. Flew across approx one quarter of sky. Green surrounded by orange and red. I heard a distinct boom long after the fireball - perhaps 30 to 50 seconds later. Almost no cloud in sky - not thunder. It was breaking up as I watched it. What I saw reminded me of the films of the Space Shuttle breaking up on re-entry with pieces breaking off and flying alongside the fireball. It faded away to nothing - appearing to have burnt up. END OF REPORT.