“Pelom Kura” Meteorite repository

Welcome

The Pelom Kura repository was born in 2023 following its formal recognition by the Meteoritical Society, becoming the first (and only one for now) official meteorite repository in Chile.

"Pelom Kura" means "stone of light" in Mapudungun, thereby referring to the brightness of shooting stars and to the light of scientific knowledge that illuminates our understanding of the natural world.

 

Why a meteorite repository?

  • To classify new meteorite samples and submit the resulting classifications to the Meteoritical Society for official nomenclature.
  • To house a permanent collection of type specimens under state-of-the-art curation.
  • To make samples available to qualified investigators for scientific research.

Before Pelom Kura existed:

  • There was no repository in Chile, only unofficial collections in universities, the Chilean Geological Survey (Sernageomin) and private museums.
  • Without the support of the Meteoritical society, it was not possible to carry out classifications in Chile, which was an aberration considering that Chile is an important proveedor of meteorites worldwide.
  • The classification of Chilean meteorites was made abroad, which resulted in an important loss of meteorite samples for Chilean research projects.

The achievements of Pelom Kura:

  • Its creation has helped minimize the loss of type specimens, offering the service of meteorite classification free of charges.
  • The collaborative work with Chilean meteorite hunters has allowed the growth of the meteorite collection to over 100 samples.
  • Several samples are currently on loan to support scientific research.
  • The repository has access to preparation laboratories and analytical facilities from the Earth Science Institute and Electronic Microscopy Unit of the Austral University of Chile. Sophisticated analysis that are sometimes required are carried out through international collaborations.
  • The repository strongly supports research projects, undergraduate and PhD theses and outreach activities.

The Table below lists the specimens available from the UACh repository (Last update: May, 2025).

NameTypeGroupCountrySpecimenMass
Calama 031Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 thick section
Calama 140Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
5 g
Calama 141Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
5.7 g
Calama 142Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 thick section
Calama 199Carbonaceous chondriteCK3Chile1 thin section
Calama 458Primitive achondriteUreiliteChile3 hand specimens
2 thick sections
1 thin section
800 g
Calama 460Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
27.5 g
Calama 461Ordinary chondriteL3Chile1 thick section
Calama 603Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
Calama 786Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
1.4 g
Campo del CieloIronIAB-MGArgentina1 hand specimen560 g
CariquimaDifferentiated achondriteHowarditeChile1 hand specimen
3 thick sections
200 g
Catalina 008Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 thick section
Catalina 273Ordinary chondriteLL3.4Chile1 thick section
Catalina 380Ordinary chondriteH3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
3.2 g
Catalina 946Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
16.5 g
Catalina 947Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
9.6 g
El Médano 216Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 hand specimen
2 thick sections
1.3 g
El Médano 390Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
5.8 g
El Médano 397Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
4.1 g
El Médano 398Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
2.7 g
El Médano 463Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 thick section
El Médano 464Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile2 thick sections
El Médano 541Ordinary chondriteH4Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
171 g
El Médano 558Ordinary chondriteL5Chile1 thick section
El Médano 559Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
El Médano 560Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
El Médano 561Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
El Médano 562Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
Los Vientos 014Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
Los Vientos 098Ordinary chondriteL3Chile1 thick section
Los Vientos 123Carbonaceous chondriteCO3.05Chile1 thick section
Los Vientos 383Differentiated achondriteHowarditeChile2 thick sections
Los Vientos 518Ordinary chondriteH3Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
10 g
Los Vientos 557Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
192 g
Los Vientos 558Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
Los Vientos 559Ordinary chondriteH4Chile1 thick section
OdessaIronIAB-MGUSA1 thick section
Paposo 085
Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 hand specimen
1 thick section
17 g
Paposo 086
Ordinary chondriteH5Chile1 thick section
Paposo 087
Ordinary chondriteL6Chile1 thick section
Paposo 088
Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 thick section
Paposo 089
Carbonaceous chondriteCO3Chile1 thick section
Sikhote-AlinIronIIABRussia1 thick section
WabarIronIIIABSaudi Arabia1 thick section
YoundeginIronIAB-MGAustralia1 thick section

Before filling out the request form below, refer to our most recent specimen catalogue, and read the following conditions regarding the process of sample request:

  1. Only requests made by researchers at established, accredited institutions will be considered.
    Students seeking samples for graduate research must have their advisor fill out and submit the sample request form. Granted samples will be the responsibility of the advisor.
  2. Loans are issued for 6 months with the possibility of extension if requested by the researcher prior to the loan return date. Extensions to the loan period must be approved by the repository curator.
  3. Unused portions of specimens issued for destructive analysis must be returned with a detailed description of analysis methods or reagents to which they were exposed. Please download, fill in, and return the Sample Return Form with your sample(s).
  4. Permission must be obtained before polished or thin sections are made from loaned samples. If permission is granted, the repository remains the owner of any sections prepared from the original sample.
  5. Loans shall not be transferred by the borrower to any other institution or individual without prior written approval.
  6. Presentations, abstracts, and published papers with results from research conducted on UACh samples must acknowledge the repository and refer to the meteorite specimen in both name and catalog number. A copy of the abstract or paper should be send to us for our records.
Request form
Name
Name
First
Last

We recently discovered two achondrites in the North of Chile: an ureilite from the Calama area in the Antofagasta region and an howardite officially named as Cariquima from the Tarapaca region. See a more detailed description and some pictures below.

Cariquima

The Cariquima howardite shows a fresh glassy fusion crust on all sides and some flow lines. There is no evident weathering, suggesting a short time on the Earth's surface. Mass of the single specimen is 280 g.

Petrography: Cariquima is a polymict breccia of sub-mm/mm sized eucrite and diogenite clasts in a fine matrix of related crystalline debris with typical grain size less than 50 μm. Contains aprox. 70 wt% eucrite materials and 30 wt% diogenite materials (based on average Al and Ca contents of the fusion crust). Eucrite components are mostly lithic fragments of basaltic eucrite, with only some clasts of cumulate eucrite. These clasts vary in texture from fine-grained porphyritic to coarse-grained subophitic. One cumulate eucrite clast presents a variolitic texture. The eucrite materials typically contain exsolved ferroan pigeonite and plagioclase, as well as minor and accessory phases such as silica, ilmenite, chromite, troilite, metal, zircon, fayalitic olivine, apatite and merrillite. Diogenite components are essentially orthopyroxene fragments, some with thin chromite veins. Shock evidence include the presence of melt pockets and veins with quenched texture in some pyroxene and silica grains and darkening of pyroxene by small blebs of metal and troilite. One round chondrule-like chromite-plagioclase assemblage was also observed in the studied polished thick section.

Geochemistry: Pyroxene overall Fe/Mn (atomic) 29.8±3.1 (N=77). Diogenitic low-Ca pyroxene Fs21.7±2.9Wo2.1±0.7 (N=18), Ca-pyroxene Fs16.6Wo38.8 (N=1). Eucritic low-Ca pyroxene Fs47.5±9.0Wo5.7±3.2  (N=36), Ca-pyroxene exsolution lamellae Fs33.7±12.4Wo34.4±7.6 (N=12). Plagioclase An87.8±4.8Ab12.2±4.8 (N=42). Chromite Cr# = 0.77±0.06 (N=8).

Ureilite (not yet officially named)


Three meteorite fragments were found within half a meter of each other. They are highly consolidated desert polished rocks, which lack fusion crust. Two fits well together. Density is about 3.3 and total mass is 860 g. Individual masses are 615, 169 and 76 g. Sample cutting with a diamond blade was rather difficult, suggesting the presence of a hard component (diamond).

Thin section in cross-polarized transmitted light (above) and reflected light (below). Sample is 4 mm wide.

Petrography: One thin section examined. Sample dominated by fine to medium-grained (0.5-2 mm) interlocked anhedral-subhedral crystals of olivine (~50 vol.%) and pigeonite (~25 vol.%) with abundant 120º triple junctions and without preferred orientation. Olivine and pigeonite show reduced margins. An interconnected network of Fe hydroxides (~15 vol.%) containing rare kamacite and up to 20 µm thick occur along silicate grain boundaries. Fe hydroxides are also present as µm-size blebs (~5 vol.%) within silicate rims, mostly olivine. Interstitial aggregates of carbon material are also widespread (~5 vol.%). They reach up to 200 µm in size and Raman measurements indicate that they are mostly made of micrometric diamonds and graphite. No large graphite flakes were observed. Some pigeonite and olivine grains show weak undulatory extinction. Twinning is also observed in some silicate grains, mostly in pigeonite and rarely in olivine. Overall, weathering grade is moderate and shock grade is low to moderate.

Geochemistry: Olivine cores (N=10) Fa21.3±0.7, FeO/MnO=40.2±3.9 (wt. ratio), Cr2O3=0.74±0.08 wt.%, CaO=0.33±0.05 wt.%. Olivine rims down to Fa2.5 and FeO/MnO= 5.4. Pigeonite cores (N=7) En72.3±0.5Wo9.8±0.2Fs17.8±0.5, Cr2O3=1.3±0.1 wt.%, Pigeonite rims up to En83.7. Kamacite 4.2 wt.% Ni.

Raman spectra showing the presence of interstitial diamond and graphite.

Peer-reviewed articles

  • Tavernier A., Pinto G.A., Valenzuela M., Garcia A., Ulloa C., Oses R., Foing B.H. (2023) Trends in planetary science research in the Puna and Atacama Desert regions: Underrepresentation of local scientific institutions? Meteoritics and Planetary Science 58, 4, 516-528. DOI: 10.1111/maps.13972
  • Pinto G.A., Marrocchi Y., Jacquet E., Olivares F. (2022). Formation of chondrule fine‐grained rims from local nebular reservoirs. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 57(5), 1004-1017. DOI: 10.1111/maps.13812
  • Pinto G.A., Marrocchi Y., Morbidelli A., Charnoz S., Varela M.E., Soto K., Martínez R., Olivares F. (2021) Constraints on Planetesimal Accretion Inferred from Particle-size Distribution in CO Chondrites. The Astrophysical Journal Letters 917, L25. DOI: 10.3847/2041-8213/ac17f2
  • Zambardi T., Franck Poitrasson F., Corgne A., Méheut M., Quitté G., Anand M. (2013) Silicon isotope variations in the inner solar system: Implications for planetary formation, differentiation and composition. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 121, 67–83. DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2013.06.040
  • Corgne A., Wood B.J., Fei Y. (2008) C- and S-rich molten alloy immiscibility and core formation of planetesimals. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 72 (2008) 2409–2416. DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2008.03.001.

Conference proceedings

  • Pinto G.A., Marrocchi Y., Villeneuve J., Olivares F., Soto K., Corgne A., Luais B. (2022) The frequency of Fe-poor relicts in type II chondrules of carbonaceous and ordinary chondrites. 53rd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Abstract 2925.
  • Pinto G.A., Marrocchi Y., Olivares F., Soto K., Varela M.E., Martínez R. (2021) Size-distribution of nebular components in CO3 Chondrites: Hits at an heterogeneous accretion history. 52nd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference. Abstract 1371.
  • Tavernier A., Demarzo M.A.D., Merazina J.A.F., Pinto G., Ulloa C., Garcia A., Foing B.H. (2021) Exokite, designe of an aerial decision-support platform in an Martian inhabited space exploration context. 52nd Lunar and Planetary Science Conference.
  • Valenzuela M., Oliveros V., Menzies A., Pinto G., Corgne A., Alvarez S., Beltrán T., Echevarría R., Revillard A., Salazar N., Soto K., Ulloa B. (2021) QEMSCAN® as a new tool for classification: First results in ordinary chondrites from Atacama Desert, Chile. 84th Annual Meeting of the Meteoretical Society. Abstract 6281.
  • Cid J., Corgne A. (2018) Metamorfismo de choque del basamento plutónico del cráter de impacto de Monturaqui. Congreso Geológico Chileno, Concepción, Chile.
  • Gómez F., Corgne A. (2018) ¿A bolide atmospheric airbust over Southern Chile during colonial times? Congreso Geológico Chileno, Concepción, Chile
  • Echevarría R., Corgne A. (2018) Hacia una clasificación de los meteoritos AIUC-1 y AIUC-2. Congreso Geológico Chileno, Concepción, Chile.

Undergraduate Thesis (UACh)

  • 2023. Katalina Vidal. Caracterización petrográfica y geoquímica de dos muestras de condritos ordinarios (MET17-02 y MET17-03) encontradas en el Desierto de Atacama.
  • 2023. Lucas Gutiérrez. Caracterización petrológica de los clastos de la howardita Cariquima.
  • 2023. Nicolás Cárcamo. Estudio petrológico, clasificación y origen de las muestras AV-MO2B y AV-MO8B de meteoritos encontrados en el Desierto de Atacama, Chile.
  • 2022. Katherine Neumann. Clasificación petrográfica y geoquímica de los meteoritos MV-088 Y MV-039 encontrados en el Desierto de Atacama, Chile.
  • 2021. Francisco Gómez. Investigación de las evidencias geológicas asociadas al posible evento de explosión de un meteoroide en las Islas Guaitecas reportado en manuscritos históricos de la colonia.
  • 2020. Kevin Soto. Caracterización petrológica y origen de dos meteoritos encontrados en el Desierto de Atacama, Chile.
  • 2020. Rodrigo Echevarría. Clasificación de los meteoritos del Atacama Taltal 001 y San Juan 086 representados en las muestras AIUC-01 Y AIUC-02.

Articles

Pinto, G., Flores, L., Martínez, R. (2020). Museos interactivos de ciencia y la alfabetización científica: Rol del Museo del Meteorito. Ápice. Revista de Educación Científica, 4(2), 63-72. DOI: 10.17979/arec.2020.4.2.5829

Asteroid Day conferences





2023

Talks

Specialists - Sociedad Geológica de Chile

The persons behind the UACh "Pelom Kura" repository are:

  • Dr. Alexandre Corgne. Associate profesor UACh. Research areas include the study of planetary interiors using experimental petrology and geochemistry.
  • Dr. Gabriel Pinto. Early-career planetary scientist studying the conditions of formation and agglomeration of chondrules in the early Solar System.
  • Dr.(c) Kevin Soto. Early-career researcher studying the thermal history of carbonaceous chondrites.
  • Ms. Katalina Vidal. Geologist. Undergraduate thesis and other projects focused on the classification of ordinary chondrites

Collaborators include:

  • Dr. Millarca Valenzuela (Universidad Católica del Norte, Chile).
  • Dr. Jérôme Gattacceca (CEREGE, France)
  • Dr.(c) Nicolás Cárcamo. Geologist. Undergraduate thesis focused on the classification and weathering of ordinary chondrites. Currently doing a PhD at Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris (France) on early Earth differentiation.
  • Mr. Rodrigo Martínez. Museo del Meteorito, San Pedro de Atacama, Chile.