— By origin —
Choose the place.
Where every fragment began.
Each card a place. Each place, a story. Click through to see what's currently in the catalog.
i.Sweden
Muonionalusta
Swedish Lapland · above the Arctic Circle
The meteorites we find ourselves. Hunted across the snow of Lapland with metal detector and shovel — the same way we have done it for twelve years.
ClassIron, IVA
Found1906
Sourced byUs
Browse Muonionalusta →
ii.Kenya
Sericho
Habaswein, Kenya · East African Rift
A pallasite. Olivine crystals — translucent gold and green — suspended in a matrix of nickel-iron. Rarer than diamond.
ClassPallasite
Found2016
Sourced byLocal finders
Browse Sericho →
iii.Russia
Seymchan
Magadan Region, Far Eastern Russia
From the cold edge of Siberia. A rare meteorite that exists in two forms — pure iron with sharp Widmanstätten lines.
ClassPallasite / Iron
Found1967
Sourced byNetwork
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iv.China
Aletai
Xinjiang, China · the Gobi Desert
Iron from the Gobi. One of the largest known meteorite falls on Earth — fragments range from grams to thirty tonnes.
ClassIron, IIIE
Found1898
Sourced byStrewnfield
Browse Aletai →
v.Chile
Imilac
Atacama Desert, Chile · the driest place on Earth
Found in the place where almost nothing rusts. The Atacama's extreme dryness has preserved Imilac pallasites for millennia.
ClassPallasite
Found1822
Sourced byStrewnfield
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vi.South America
Campo del Cielo
South America · the "Field of Heaven"
A meteorite shower that fell roughly 4,000 years ago and lay buried until indigenous tribes pulled it from the soil.
ClassIron, IAB
Fell~2000 BC
Sourced byStrewnfield
Browse Campo del Cielo →
vii.Czech Republic
Moldavite
South Bohemia, Czech Republic
Born from impact. Fifteen million years ago a meteorite struck Bavaria with such force that molten Earth was thrown 250 kilometers.
ClassTektite
Formed~15M BC
Sourced byBohemian dealers
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viii.NWA
Chondrites
Northwest Africa · the Sahara
The oldest rock you can hold — stony meteorites from the dawn of the solar system, studded with chondrules.
ClassChondrite
Age~4.6 billion yr
Sourced bySaharan finders
Browse chondrites →
ix.The Moon
Lunar
The Moon · ejected by ancient impact
A piece of the Moon, blown off the lunar surface by a long-ago impact and pulled to Earth by gravity. Rarer than gold by mass.
ClassLunar
OriginThe Moon
Recovered< 0.5 t ever
Browse Lunar →
— The catalog, in a line —
Lapland · Rift Valley · Magadan · Gobi · Atacama · Pampas · Bohemia · Sahara · The Moon
Nine places on the map. One catalog. Every stone, hand-found or hand-picked from the people who pull them from the ground.
— Before you choose —
Questions, answered.
How do I know it’s a real meteorite?
On iron pieces, the Widmanstätten pattern cannot be reproduced by any process on Earth. Every piece ships with a signed Certificate of Authenticity and is sourced under Emil’s IMCA membership (#4748).
Does the certificate carry a number?
No. Our certificates are signed, not numbered — each one names the meteorite, its classification and origin, and is signed by hand.
Will an iron meteorite rust?
Iron and stony-iron meteorites are metallic iron, so in damp air they can develop surface rust over time. The fix is simple: keep them dry.
How should I handle and store it?
Handle etched surfaces gently and ideally with clean, dry hands or cotton gloves. Keep iron pieces somewhere dry and stable.
Is every piece really one of a kind?
Yes. Every sample is a single, individual piece — cut, weighed and photographed on its own. What you see is the exact stone you receive.
Or choose another way.
If place isn't your starting point, every sample in our catalog can also be browsed by shape.