-
Meteoric iron,
sometimes meteoritic iron, is a
native metal and early-universe protoplanetary-disk
remnant found in
meteorites and made from the elements...
- Tutankhamun's
meteoric iron dagger, also
known as Tutankhamun's
iron dagger and King Tut's dagger, is an
iron-bladed
dagger from the tomb of the ancient...
- an iron–nickel
alloy known as
meteoric iron that
usually consists of two
mineral phases:
kamacite and taenite. Most
iron meteorites originate from cores...
-
naturally on Earth's
surface as
telluric iron or
meteoric iron. The
affinity of
nickel atoms (atomic number 28) for
iron (atomic number 26)
results in natural...
- 33 tons.
Another example of a late use of
meteoric iron is an adze from
around 1000 AD
found in Sweden.
Native iron in the
metallic state occurs rarely as...
- Stony-
iron meteorites or
siderolites are
meteorites that
consist of
nearly equal parts of
meteoric iron and silicates. This
distinguishes them from the...
- that:
Meteoric iron or "sky-
iron" (Tib. gnam lcags) is the
supreme substance for
forging the
physical representation of the
vajra or
other iron weapons...
-
often used as anvils.
Meteoric iron was very rare and valuable, and
difficult for
ancient people to work.
Iron is
usually found as
iron ore on Earth, except...
-
Meteoric iron, a
natural iron–nickel alloy, was used by
various ancient peoples thousands of
years before the
Iron Age. The earliest-known
meteoric iron...
-
meteoric iron in 3500 BC or
earlier were
found in Gerzeh,
Egypt by G. A. Wainwright. The
beads contain 7.5% nickel,
which is a
signature of
meteoric origin...