Meteorite Hunting
How To Find Meteorites
(Revised 2010 Edition)
by Eric Wichman
Meteorites USA
Most people don’t know you can own a meteorite much less find one practically in your own back yard. There’s a very good chance there’s been meteorites found very near where you are right now. There’s been over 50,000 meteorites found in the world and 1600 of those have been found right in the united States.
Know Where To Hunt For Meteorites
The first thing you need is a place to hunt. If you live in the southwest U.S. you are in prime meteorite hunting territory. This area of the country lends itself to the preservation of meteoritic material. Because of the southwest’s arid climate, and low annual rainfall, meteorites are more preserved here than in any other part of the U.S. Meteorites contain iron and iron is prone to corrosion, therefore a dryer climate will preserve meteorites for a longer period of time.
That’s why more meteorites are found in the Sahara desert than any other place on earth! Northwest African meteorites (better known as NWA meteorites) are plentiful because the climate is perfect. The Sahara desert covers the entire northern region of Africa!
Anywhere there’s “Old Ground” and the climate is arid, you’ll most likely find meteorites. They’re hard to find and rarer than gold but when you find one there’s a chance there’s more in that area.
Where NOT To Hunt
First and foremost. Do not hunt on land you don’t have permission to hunt on. This is perhaps the most important rule in the meteorite world. Trespassing is illegal. Don’t do it. People that do, make it harder on the rest of the meteorite community, and it can tarnish reputations and turn people off to the professional meteorite hunters that do follow the rules.
Also, not all terrain lends itself to meteorite hunting. Swamps wouldn’t be a good place to look, but anywhere that is relatively dry, with old ground is a great place to hunt.
You can find meteorites just about anywhere on the planet. The Willamette meteorite for example (the largest meteorite ever found in the United States at 15.5 tons) was found in Oregon of all places. I don’t know if you’ve ever been to Oregon but it rains there in the forested areas almost daily. A lot of the Willamette had weathered away but it still is the biggest meteorite yet to be found in the U.S.
If a chondrite (stone meteorite) falls in the ocean, the iron in it breaks down and will crumble into nothing in a short period of time. Water, humidity, and wind erosion contribute greatly to a meteorite’s demise.
A Little About Me
I’ve been a wilderness junky all my life. I was born and raised in the sticks and spent my entire childhood and early adult life stomping around the wilds of Florida so I know a thing or two about hunting, and the outdoors. My dad was a sergeant in the Army and he raised us like little soldiers. He always told my sister and I to “Always Be Prepared”. We spent so much time in the wilderness it was like a second home to us. We would go on hunting trips and survival trips like other people went to the movies. This was great training for meteorite hunting!
Back to finding meteorites… The first thing you need is a place to hunt. Not all terrain lends itself to meteorite hunting. Florida is a considerably different environment than the Southwest United States. Swamps, marshes, beaches and dense forests cover most of Florida. None of that type of terrain is in the Southwest that’s for sure. Meteorites are typically found in arid, dry, desert locales. However you can find meteorites just about anywhere on the planet. The Willamette meteorite for example (the largest meteorite ever found in the United States) was found in Oregon of all places. I don’t know if you’ve ever been to Oregon but it rains there in the forested areas almost daily. This meteorite was found in a forest, and a lot of it had weathered away but it still is the biggest meteorite yet to be found in the U.S.
Meteorites Are Cosmic Treasures
Meteorites are rarer than gold and some are more valuable than diamonds, but they are nothing like the precious metals and stones. You must keep in mind they’re not from our planet. They’re from out there, in the vast reaches of space. They fly across our solar system and crash into Earth and the feeling one has when one holds a meteorite in their hand is wondrous.
Tools Of The Meteorite Hunter
Let’s start your meteorite hunting adventures off right. You need the equipment, which costs money so you know you’ll need a job. Unless of course you’re super rich, but then you could buy any meteorite you wanted. Here’s a short list of some of the tools you’ll need to make you meteorite hunting successful.
You’ll need this stuff as a start:
A Meteorite Stick: Basically a golf club with the head chopped off with a magnet attached on the tip. You’ll use this to touch and pick up meteorites on the surface of the ground you are hunting. Meteorite sticks are only good for 3 things, picking up meteorites, as a makeshift walking stick, and to whack those pesky rattle snakes that want to make your leg their lunch.
A Good Metal Detector
You can find meteorites with a metal detector. But not just any metal detector will do. Though meteorites have iron and can be located with cheap discount store metal detectors, the serious meteorite hunter will spend a little more on a metal detector specifically designed for gold detecting. They’re more sensitive and tend to find meteorites at much greater depths.
Whites, Fisher, and Minelab all make great metals detectors that you can use to find meteorites. The Gold Bug Series from Fisher are great for meteorite hunting. Many meteorite hunters like the White’s GMT, or even the V-SAT. You can expect to spend about $250 to $450 for a good used detector that will find meteorites.
Buy yourself a few good rare earth disc magnets from these great online suppliers of neodymium magnets.
GPS Location Device: You absolutely need on of these. It’s imperative you have on in the field. Not just for marking the location of your meteorite find for classification, but it’s a must have for wilderness navigation.
Recording meteorite location data is vital to preserving scientifically valuable information. It’s a rule in the meteorite community that when you find a meteorite to record it’s coordinates, take a photo of the meteorite “in-situ” and the location where it was found, all before removing the stone from it’s resting place. This helps ensure that the strewnfield data is preserved and that the information isn’t lost.
Garmin is by far one of the best GPS devices money can buy. I’m am of course a bit biased when it comes to equipment. There are other good brands on there but few with the technology Garmin GPS systems offer at such reasonable prices.
A Good Quality Small Pick Axe (Dig Tool): You’ll use this to dig up your meteorites of course. (Attach A Strong Rare Earth Magnet To The Dig Tool with JBweld or some other epoxy resin, or liquid plastic.) This aids in finding the meteorite faster as most meteorites are magnetic due to the high iron content!
A small pick axe or dig tool is simply a must for meteorite hunting. Some meteorites are not magnetic but these are harder to find even with a metal detector, and will not give a signal or a very weak signal when using a metal detector. K&J Magnetics sells Neodymium magnets at very reasonable prices. Visit their site here: Rare Earth Neodymium Magnets
Basic Desert/Outdoor Gear: Maps, Backpack, waist pack, a good knife, multi-tool, rope (parachute cord), water, water, water, food, first aid kit, snake bite kit, tire repair kit. If you are traveling by ATV, or 4X4 it’s good to have a tow strap, shovel, two way radios, and extra fuel and water. This list is not all inclusive, you’ll also need a compass, extra batteries for both the radios and GPS, a flashlight, lighter, matches, plastic baggies, trash bags, and a good book to curl up next to the campfire with. A survival kit is always a good idea as well. This can have fishing line, hooks, a few extra matches, band-aids, alcohol swabs, etc… You get the idea. Don’t forget the cell phone!
Finding An Area To Hunt Meteorites
Once you have all the equipment you need, then you need an area to hunt. This is where good solid research comes in. Do a Google search for the keyword phrase “meteorite database” or visit the Meteoritical Society’s website here: http://tin.er.usgs.gov/meteor/ There you will find a database chock full of great information on ALL the classified finds on the US and the world for that matter, complete with GPS coordinates, and Google Earth links for mapping and satellite photos. You can’t beat this for quality in-depth information.
NOTE: Don’t just go searching coordinates you find in the database! Some property may be private State or Federal land and you cannot hunt there without permission or making sure you are allowed to hunt there. Get the land owners permission BEFORE you start your hunt. If you are hunting Federal land be sure you have maps! Make sure you know where you are and that it’s legal to hunt that location. This article is NOT meant as legal advise. CYA people. Use common sense. Don’t hunt land you don’t own without permission. Simple as that.
OK, so now what? You have your equipment, your maps, your trusty meteorite stick and an idea of where to search. Well, get out there and hunt. If you are hunting a dry lake bed it’s very different than hunting in the hills with trees, bushes and big boulders to navigate around.
Meteorite Hunting With A Metal Detector
Familiarize yourself with your metal detector. Buy a few meteorites for calibrating your detector. Once out in the field you can “throw down” the meteorite tune your detector and your off hunting meteorite. Don’t forget to pick the meteorite back up!
Swing Low & Slow
When you’re swinging your detector keep it low to the ground and swing slow and steady until you get used to it. Once you get the hang of it you can speed things up a bit.
Cover Lots Of Ground
There’s a lot of unsearched ground out there. If you grid the area well enough you will find a meteorite, and once you find one you can slow down a bit and search the area a bit more. If you don’t find any more, move on. After a while you will begin to recognize false targets.
Use Your Eyes: Don’t forget to “look” for the meteorites as well.
Look for the meteorites with your eyes as well and the detector. Meteorites don’t look like Earth rocks. Look for rocks that are out of place or just look odd for the area you are hunting. Look for the dark black or brown fusion crust. A weathered meteorite that has been on Earth for a long time will typically turn a red-brown color and sometimes will be shiny due to wind blown sand erosion.
And remember very few magnetic rocks are meteorites, but most meteorites are magnetic.
Identifying Meteorites
Once you find a stone you think is a meteorite there are a series of tests you can use to determine if your stone could possibly be a meteorite.
To understand how to identify a meteorite you must first know the types of meteorites there are. There is a set of identifying characteristics that most meteorites exhibit that will aid in identification.
Iron & Stone Meteorites
Typically most meteorites contain iron and tend to be magnetic. Even Stone type meteorites. They are usually heavier and much more dense than ordinary terrestrial stones due in part to their high iron content. Meteorites contain a higher concentrations of nickel than ordinary Earth rocks as well. You can use an off-the-shelf nickel allergy test to test for the presence of nickel.
When viewed under magnification the interior of a stone meteorite will show not only the iron flecks inside the stone, but there are small spherical mineral inclusions called chondrules that will be scattered throughout the matrix. The matrix is the material surrounding the chondrules and iron.
Fusion Crust
Freshly fallen meteorites will also exhibit what’s called fusion crust. This is a thin veneer of black material that is formed on the surface of the stone as the meteoroid enters our atmosphere. Usually this dark black fusion crust looks very much like charcoal on the outside, and if a meteorite is a stone type then they typically have a lighter colored stone interior that looks much like concrete.
Thumbprints
Another very important indicator that a stone might be a meteorite are regmaglypts, or thumbprints. These are indentations, ridges, scoops, and depressions on the surface of the meteorite formed through a process called ablation. This happens while the meteoroid passes through our atmosphere.
The extremely high temperatures that the meteoroid endures melts away less dense material from the surface of the stone and this creates the rounded curves and depressions known as thumbprints. Thumbprints are called such because the human thumb usually fits nicely in these depressions.
Types of Meteorites
There are 3 main types of meteorites. Stone meteorites, iron meteorites, and stony iron meteorites. As the names suggest the stony iron meteorites usually consist of a 50/50 mixture of iron and silicate minerals. There are two types of stony iron meteorites; pallasites, and mesosiderites and they are a very rare type of meteorite and make up about 1%-5% of all meteorites.
Iron meteorites make up about 5% of all known falls, and though this number will vary from source to source most will agree that this is probably accurate.
Stone meteorites (Ordinary Chondrites) make up the majority, about 80% to 95% of all meteorites that fall to earth. They are called chondrites due to the small spherical inclusions called chondrules. These minerals are formed in the vacuum and zero gravity environment in space, hence the reason for their shape.
What if I think I have a Meteorite?
There is much more to identifying meteorites than simply using the techniques mentioned here, but if you have a stone that meets all the characteristics then you just might have a meteorite. The best thing to do would be to contact a university like ASU (Arizona State University) or a meteorite expert which can identify meteorites. There are lots of professional meteorite hunters and dealers online that are happy to help you identify or give you advice on a possible meteorite find.
Meteorite Classification
A meteorite, to be eligible for a name must be classified by a lab and approved by the Meteoritical Society. Once classified by a lab, a meteorite is eligible for a name to be determined usually relating to the place of the find. A perfect example would be the Sikhote Alin meteorite which is an iron meteorite found in the Sikhote Alin mountains in Siberia, Russia. PAGE WITH NUMEROUS CLASSIFICATION LINKS
Meteorites Are All Around Us
Meteorites have been found everywhere on this planet, Antarctica, Africa, North and South America, Russia, China, Europe and Australia. In fact Australia is a great place to hunt for meteorites.
Hunting meteorites is one thing, finding them is quite another story. If you’d like to learn more about meteorites Meteorites USA has a plethora of meteorite information, articles, photos, videos, maps, and even has some meteorites for collectors as well as a meteorite newsletter.
© Copyright 2010 Eric Wichman – Meteorites USA
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Note: This article and it’s contents are available for re-publishing on related content sites.
The article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.
Credit/link should read “What is a meteorite strewnfield? – by MeteoritesUSA.com”
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Revisions – Corrections – Suggestions:
If you have something you’d like to add to the article or have found a mistake or omission, please contact me . This is a work in progress and will be updated as I get the time.



























Hi,
Wow you gave me enough information,I can not wait for the snow here in my area of Indiana to thaw. I have been watching meteorite men on hd science Chanel and I know that its not that easy but sounds like something I will be doing this summer. Were would be a good spot say here in the Midwest to start my new found hobby?
I’ve been a reading books and websites for meteorite information for a long time and this is the best, concentrated I’ve found. Thanks!
Glad you like it… Thank you!
Hello, for Okla.. I’ma wanna be meteroite hunter, after seeing some guys on tv out doing it, i believe up in Neb.. ne way certainly though i might wanna give meterorite hunting a try after hearing what they were estimating these things to be worth.
Great! Meteorite hunting is fun, adventurous, exciting, and humbling all at the same time. Some of them may be valuable, but they’re more rare than gold!
Eric
I love Science and everything that are related with the Planet, you guys are doing great job.
in the coming december i will be in vacation in Brazil and the good is that i will be in desert in the north east . i gonna bring with me a METEORITE FINDER KIT…NICE!!!!
Dog gone , i don’t get the science channel. i did see some guys meteorite hunting on tv a bout a yr ago though. So maybe i can watch some intersting clips on youtube though. I am racking my brain on how to borrow the money for a decent gold detector since i read here that those would b the best ones to use. great website here i think. and if i have half the luck these guys on tv that i saw. well heck, i’ll retire and do this full time at the young age of 49 hehehe no i am serious.
I found a meterorite bigger than a golfball smaller than a baseball and it is all black magnet tested and has a hole trough it frome what i read that is rare how can i get it tested i don’t trust sending it in the mail i live in az please help.
Send clear and sharp photos. I’ll take a look at your stone and give you my unbiased experienced opinion. Keep in mind, meteorites are VERY rarely ever found, and 99.9% of ALL suspected meteorites are Earth rocks, or “MeteorWrongs”. Don’t be surprised if what you have is terrestrial. If it’s a meteorite, I can refer you to a lab to get it classified, and I might be interested in buying it or helping you sell it to one of my many meteorite collector clients.
Hello, for the last two yrs i have been doing research on meteorites. While living in Ga. hunting arrow heads, i came across a rock that really stood out. I picked it up an noticed it was quite dense. Also had a shiny smooth crust with tiny bubbles covering it. the bottom side had destinct flow marks, like it had been really super heated. I took it to a few colleges and one museum. They all agreed it was different but no one could tell me what it was. I really got discouraged when i found that a magnet was not attracted to it. Until further research told me that not all meteorites are magnetic. Id very much like to send pictures and get your opinion. It weighs about thirty lbs and is a little bigger than a soft ball, the in side is a rusty brown with some hints of yellow and greenish. Could this be a Lunar or Martian meteorite. I now reside in Wisconsin and have become quite the meteor hound. Your help would be greatly appreciated.
Hi….. Thanks for all the great info on this page. I have been doing some research and this is about the best info found yet. I am on the eastern shore. Born and raised lol. I know we cant all be perfect lol. Anyways I have seen that we had a great meteor many many years ago in the chesapeke bay. Unfortunately I cant dive so I was wondering if there was anyway for me to find where a good strewn field would be or if you had a good idea of a place for me to at least start looking in this area. I would like to practice closer to home before taking the big expensive trips and getting there and not knowing what iam doing and losing out. Thanks for any help you can provide. My son and I cant wait to spend that quality time together out there in the field.
James
I got the bug from TV, did a search, found that there was a 36 Lb specimin found about 3 miles from my home, back in 1818. Trying to find out where it is now, so I have an idea what to watch for.
I do have a detector, and I believe I can get permission from the landowner to look around. There was no mention of any other pieces found around there. More likely there is, than not, right?
Thank you.
It just occoured to me that the meteor that was found near here may have been brought here by the glacier way back when. The glacial terminus is 40 or 50 miles south of here.
I guess I won’t know till I search a few acres around where the IRUNGE R was found. What is IRUNGE R?
Hi, Sometimes only one piece is ever found of a meteorite in an area. Meteorites typically fall in multiples, however, it’s not uncommon for there to be single stone falls. It is quite possible that only one piece had ever been located, and there could be more out there. It never hurts to look for more! Always get permission from the landowner before hunting anywhere.
Regards,
Eric
Thanks, Eric.
Turns out, I know the owner of the land! I got permission 2 days ago. He and his family have owned the property for the last 60+ years, and he said there has never been any searches that he knows of. In fact, he was un-aware of the find in 1818.
Things are very muddy right now. I will wait a week or two to start my search.
How about where do I find meteorites in Georgia, USA? Can I find them on the ground by inside the city?
@Ron – You can check the Meteoritical Bulletin’s “Meteorite Database” http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/metbull.php – There are over 50,000 classified meteorites (most with coordinates) listed in the database. Many of those are in the United States. You can do a search for your state to see if there are any meteorites found in your area.
WARNING: Rule #1 Get permission to hunt on land you don’t own. – Do not just go hunting with the coordinates in the meteorite database. Some of the meteorites listed were found on private property where the finder received permission to hunt.
Have fun and Happy Hunting!
Eric