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Man ‘ecstatic’ about possible meteorite in Lake Takapō/Tekapo

Thursday, 21 March 2024

A rock found in the Mackenzie Country is believed to be a meteorite spotted in a fiery descent on March 13.

A Wellington man is over the moon after discovering what may be the 10th meteorite found in New Zealand.

A group of more than 20 in Lake Takapō/Tekapo set out early on Thursday morning to find the meteorite after a fireball was seen racing across the sky over North Otago and South Canterbury about 9pm on March 13.

It has been 20 years since a meteorite was found in New Zealand, and 99 years since one was discovered in South Canterbury. The last, in 1925, was found in Morven by William Stewart.

Jack Weterings, left, from Wellington has found what may be New Zealand
Jack Weterings, left, from Wellington has found what may be New Zealand's 10th meteorite in Lake Takapō/Tekapo. He is with members of his search group Sarah Adam and Marina Stroinigg.

On Thursday, Jack Weterings, 29, was “ecstatic” to have discovered the peculiar rock even before reaching his team’s designated search area.

There is high certainty this rock found by Wellington man Jack Weterings is New Zealand’s 10th meteorite.
There is high certainty this rock found by Wellington man Jack Weterings is New Zealand’s 10th meteorite.

“I'm pretty ecstatic to find something so cool and rare so quickly,” he said.

“I'm truly amazed by it. We were heading to our search area and I looked down, and the rock just stood out and was unusual, and did not match the landscape in the area. Its colour was different and everything about it was different.

“It was wedged into the soil. Half in and half out.”

Jack Weterings, centre, with a search party all smiles after finding the meteorite on Thursday.
Jack Weterings, centre, with a search party all smiles after finding the meteorite on Thursday.

A keen follower of astronomy, Weterings said he just happened to be in the area when he heard about the search and decided to join in.

The meteorite may be donated to a museum after further analysis at University of Otago.
The meteorite may be donated to a museum after further analysis at University of Otago.

He felt “very lucky’’ with the discovery.

University of Otago geologist Marshall Croft Palmer, who was also part of the search party, said there was a 90% chance that the rock Weterings found was the meteorite, because of its high nickel content.

Search organiser and Fireballs Aotearoa spokesperson Steve Wyn-Harris said the rock would be transported to University of Otago and put through more analysis, including a spectrometer, in order to gain 100% confirmation.

“We’re highly certain this is the meteorite we were looking for,” Wyn-Harris said.

Wyn-Harris said the entire search group was pretty excited with the find.

“We split into groups and we were walking to our individual search areas when Jack found the meteorite. I was 200-300m ahead of him, and turned back and saw that he was looking down at something.

The search party checks a map in Lake Takapō/Tekapo on Thursday morning.
The search party checks a map in Lake Takapō/Tekapo on Thursday morning.

“I went over and said ‘it looks like a meteorite’.”

Following analysis at the University of Otago, Wyn-Harris said the meteorite could be donated to a museum for the public to view.

He added that Weterings would receive a Fireballs Aotearoa camera for finding the meteorite, the same camera that captured the fireball last week.

Fireballs Aotearoa, which had organised the search, aimed to recover freshly fallen meteorites.

“Calculations by Fireballs Aotearoa indicate 0.5kg of the rock survived its dramatic journey through Earth's atmosphere and is now lying somewhere in the Mackenzie Country,” the group said prior to the find, in a social media post.

The group’s calculations indicated the meteorite had landed somewhere south of Lake Takapō/Tekapo.

Meteors or “shooting stars” were meteoroids that entered the earth’s atmosphere at a very high speed. These rocks heated up during the process and produced a streak of light.

Otago University geologist Professor James Scott explained: “A fireball is formed by the air in front of the rock becoming compressed and heating to the point at which it melts and vaporises the margins of the rock.”

The Fireballs Aotearoa website said there had been nine meteorites found in New Zealand so far and it had been 20 years since the last one was found.

“In 2004 a meteorite came through the roof of an Auckland house during daylight, but the fireball wasn’t seen,” the website said.