The Meteoritical Bulletin, No. 100, 2014 June 1,* 2 3 Alex RUZICKA , Jeffrey N. GROSSMAN and Laurence GARVIE 1Cascadia Meteorite Laboratory, Portland State University, Portland, Oregon, 97207-0751, USA 2U.S. Geological Survey, MS 954, Reston, Virginia 20192, USA 3Center for Meteorite Studies, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, 85287-1404 *Corresponding author's e-mail address:
[email protected] Abstract− Meteoritical Bulletin 100 contains 1943 meteorites including 8 falls (Boumdeid (2011), Huaxi, Košice, Silistra, Sołtmany, Sutter's Mill, Thika, Tissint), with 1575 Ordinary chondrites, 139 Carbonaceous chondrites, 96 HED achondrites, 25 Ureilites, 18 Primitive achondrites, 17 Iron meteorites, 15 Enstatite chondrites, 11 Lunar meteorites, 10 Mesosiderites, 10 Ungrouped achondrites, 8 Pallasites, 8 Martian meteorites, 6 Rumuruti chondrites, 3 Enstatite achondrites, and 2 Angrites, and with 937 from Antarctica, 592 from Africa, 230 from Asia, 95 from South America, 44 from North America, 36 from Oceania, 6 from Europe, and 1 from an unknown location. This will be the last Bulletin published in the current format. Information about approved meteorites can be obtained from the Meteoritical Bulletin Database (MBD) available on line at http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/ . E1 Meteoritics & Planetary Science 49, E1–E101 (2014) © Meteoritical Society, 2014. Printed in USA. Acfer 394 27°31.12’N, 3°52.82’E Petrography: Chondrules are up to 1.4 mm in diameter. There are Tamanghasset, Algeria coarse metal grains in matrix and decorating chondrule surfaces. Found: Oct 2001 The metal grains are up to 750 µm in maximum dimension. Likely Classification: Carbonaceous chondrite (CR2) paired with Acfer 394-400. Petrography: Chondrules to 3 mm.