MO-137 Moldavite Specimen

MO-137 Moldavite Specimen


#MO-137 Moldavite specimen from the Moldau River Valley. It is approximately 0.78 inch in Length and 4.05 grams in weight. This is a one-of-a-kind item - you will receive the actual item in photo. Once sold, it is gone, and you cannot order multiples.

Moldavite is a green translucent silica meteoric glass created by a large cosmic velocity meteorite which vaporized when it struck the earth in Nordlingen, Germany, creating the Reis Crater, approximately 14.8 million years ago. A small percentage of that vapor was propelled into the ionosphere by the impact explosion through the hole punched in the earth's dense atmosphere. When this silica vapor reached the cold of outer space, it condensed then solidified and fell back to earth creating a strewn field of green tektite, several hundred miles away in the Moldau River Valley north of Prague, Czechoslovakia. Thus the name Moldavite. There are several location names for different areas of the valley where Moldavite is dug from the ground. The finest specimens are the Besed Nice, valued for their color, texture, and beauty. Moldavite is one of the rarest varieties of tektite.