Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Big Dogtag Pendant of Sericho Meteorite

  • ONE OF ONE - NO TWIN EXISTS
Sale price€325.00

5,000+ pieces shipped since 2020

"Every fragment in this catalog is older than the planet you live on. We hunt them, source them from the locals at the strewnfield areas. What you receive is real, signed, and one of a kind."
— Emil

Certificate included
IMCA-certified expert
Insured worldwide
14-day returns
Authentic meteorite pendant, in the shape of a Dogtag, made with Sericho meteorite and silver 925. Genuine pallasite pendant
Big Dogtag Pendant of Sericho Meteorite Sale price€325.00
Meteorite Origin Source Context Layer
THE STORY

Found in Eastern Kenya.

The Sericho meteorite is a pallasite — one of the rarest types of meteorite known to science. Pallasites form at the boundary between an asteroid's molten metallic core and its rocky mantle, where iron-nickel and translucent olivine crystals fuse together in a way Earth itself cannot replicate.

Sericho fell to Earth thousands of years ago, scattering across the dry plains of Habaswein in eastern Kenya. The strewnfield wasn't recognized until 2016, when local families began pulling fragments from the ground after the rains.

The fragment in this pendant was hand-picked from one of those families — sourced directly, with provenance — and shaped in our Barcelona workshop.

SPECIFICATIONS

The details.

METEORITE
Sericho
ORIGIN
Habaswein, Kenya
CLASSIFICATION
Pallasite (PMG)
COMPOSITION
Iron-nickel + olivine
FINISH
Cut, polished, sealed
SHAPED IN
Barcelona, Spain
AUTHENTICATED BY
Emil Davidsson · IMCA #4748
CERTIFICATE
Included, signed
CRYSTALS FROM INSIDE AN ASTEROID

What you're looking at.

Sericho pallasite olivine crystals macro view

Those translucent gold-green inclusions are crystals of olivine — the same mineral that makes peridot, but formed in a place no peridot has ever existed: at the boundary between an asteroid's molten iron core and its rocky mantle.

Pallasites are among the rarest meteorites known. Less than 1% of all meteorites recovered are pallasites — and Sericho is one of only a handful of strewnfields where they have been found in any quantity. When light passes through the olivine, it glows. No two fragments hold the same pattern.

Authenticity

Every piece is signed.

Every Stardust piece ships with a Certificate of Authenticity issued by us — naming the meteorite, its origin, its classification and the Meteorite Bulletin official number.

Each certificate is authenticated by our co-founder Emil Davidsson, an accredited member of the International Meteorite Collectors Association — IMCA #4748 — the global body that vets individual experts in authenticated meteorite material.

If your piece is ever questioned, we re-certify it. For as long as it exists.

How it arrives

From our hands to yours.

i.

Hand-packed.

Every piece is wrapped and packed personally in Barcelona. By us.

ii.

Insured & tracked.

FedEx with signature on receipt. 4–7 days worldwide.

iii.

Premium box.

Stardust packaging. Ready to gift, even to yourself.

iv.

14-day returns.

If something doesn't feel right, send it back. No questions.

A NOTE FROM THE TEAM

"We are a passionate team behind Stardust. We hunt the meteorites, we choose every fragment, we sign every certificate. If you ever want to talk — about a piece, about a custom commission, about anything, if you have any doubts — write to us directly. We answer every message."

— The Stardust team
BEFORE YOU BUY

Frequently asked.

Is this a real meteorite?

Yes. Every Stardust piece contains a verified meteorite fragment, with a Certificate of Authenticity authenticated by our co-founder Emil Davidsson — an accredited member of the International Meteorite Collectors Association (IMCA #4748), a global body that vets individual experts in authenticated meteorite material. Sericho is a Kenyan pallasite, classified by the Meteoritical Society and recognized in the official Meteoritical Bulletin Database.

What is a pallasite?

A pallasite is a stony-iron meteorite — formed at the boundary between an asteroid's molten metallic core and its rocky mantle. The translucent gold-green crystals you see are olivine, the same mineral that makes peridot. Less than 1% of all meteorites recovered are pallasites, which makes them rarer than most precious gems on Earth.

Will the olivine fade or change color?

No. Olivine is a stable mineral — its color comes from its molecular structure, not a coating or treatment. Each fragment is sealed before setting to protect the iron-nickel matrix from oxidation. With basic care, your piece will look the same in 50 years as it does today.

How big is it really?

The pendant is 16mm in diameter — slightly smaller than a 2-euro coin, sized to feel substantial without being heavy. Total weight including chain is 6.4g.

Can I gift-wrap this order?

Every order ships in our premium Stardust box, ready to gift. If you'd like a personal handwritten note included, leave a message at checkout — we'll add it.

What if it doesn't fit or I don't like it?

14-day returns, no questions asked. Send it back in its original packaging and we'll refund the full amount. We'll cover return shipping for orders within the EU.

Do you ship to my country?

Yes. We ship worldwide via FedEx — fully insured and tracked, with signature required on receipt. Standard delivery is 4–7 business days from Barcelona to most countries.