Going to Antarctica to Look for Meteorites

A slice of the Esquel meteorite, a stony-iron meteorite, type pallasite.

A slice of the Esquel meteorite, a stony-iron meteorite, type pallasite.

The International Polar Foundation

If you like this website, we have three more for you to check out: PolarFoundation, EducaPoles, ExploraPoles

Full Gallery

  • Fremantle Harbour, Australia
  • The Shirase preparing for departure.
  • Bridge of the Shirase
  • Deck of the Shirase
  • Steven Goderis, a Belgian doctoral student from the Vrij Universiteit Brussel (VUB) who is taking part of the JARE 51 team looking for meteorites in the eastern Sør Rondane Mountains.
  • The Shirase, the new icebreaker of Japan's National Institute of Polar Research (NIPR)
  • Steven Goderis posing in front of the Shirase before departure.
  • A large iron meteorite that landed in Chilé decades ago.
  • The Marília Meteorite, a chondrite H4 that fell in Marília, Brazil in 1971.
  • A slice of the Esquel meteorite, a stony-iron meteorite, type pallasite.
  • A carbonaceous chondrite(CV3)meteorite found in Mexico in 1969 during the Allende meteorite shower.
  • An ordinary chondrite called
  • A Eucrite achondrite that fell to Earth in 1960 in Australia during the Millbillillie meteor shower. The meteorite has a shiny black fusion crust with flow lines.
  • NWA 869, an ordinary chondrite, cut and polished with visible chondrules and metal flakes.
  • An ordinary chondrite dubbed

Featured lately

Dr. Alexander Robinson

Alexander Robinson: Improving Predictions of Future Greenland Ice Sheet Melt

A new model looking at future melt of the Greenland Ice Sheet generated some buzz…



Support Us

Sponsorships & Donations

All donations to the IPF are tax deductible.

Donations can be made by various means, depending if they are made by a company or by individuals.

Support Us


Shop online

Shop online

Browse our products

Some of our educational products can be purchased online (CD-ROMs, comic strips).

We also have T-shirts, caps and other products of the like.


Keep in Touch

Want to keep in touch with SciencePoles and the International Polar Foundation?