Ashford antique dealers John Shepherd and Erna Hiscock offer chance to buy 50,000 year old meteorite
Published: 09:00, 31 March 2017
Updated: 09:48, 31 March 2017
An antique dealership is set to provide an out of this world offer to visitors to a fair, with the opportunity to buy a piece of meteorite from a famous crater.
John Shepherd and Erna Hiscock, based in Ashford, will bring pieces of the original meteorite from the Barringer Meteorite Crater in Arizona to the Antiques For Everyone Spring Fair at the NEC in Birmingham on April 6 to 9.
Hiscock and Shepherd Antiques will give visitors the chance to purchase a piece of 50,000 year old history.
The Barringer Meteorite crater, named in honour of mining magnate Daniel Barringer who was first to successfully suggest the crater was caused by meteorite impact, is located in the North Arizona desert and is the breath-taking result of a collision between an asteroid traveling 26,000 miles per hour and planet Earth approximately 50,000 years ago.
It is composed of nickel-iron and is more than 30 meters across and weighs more than 270,000 metric tons.
The force of the explosion when it hit planet earth is estimated to have been equal to 2.5 megatons of TNT, which is about 150 times the force of the atomic bomb which destroyed Hiroshima during the Second World War.
The impact predated humankind an the force of the explosion melted the meteorite, dispersing it across the landscape in a fine mist of molten metal.
This mist became mixed with partially melted limestone and sandstone which was blasted out of the crater. It is pieces of this ancient amalgam that visitors will be able to buy at the Spring Fair and add to their collections.
Mary Claire Boyd, Antiques for Everyone’s Summer Fair Director, said: “It quite literally is an out of this world opportunity for those visiting the Fair and we give thanks to John Shepherd and Erna Hiscock for bringing such an unusual item for sale.”
The tri-annual fair attracts specialist dealers from all over the UK to display their art, antiques and collectables at the iconic NEC.
For more details visit the website.
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Molly Mileham-Chappell