Meteorite Impact

312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA


312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA
312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA
312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA

312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA    312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA
Libyan Desert Glass are found in nature. In the deserts of eastern Libya and western Egypt.

They melt glass bottles and call it Libyan Desert Glass. Natural real Libyan Desert Glass is yellowish in color.

ALL the so called " Libyan Desert Glass " from China and India are fake and worthless. The ones I sell come with a life time Certificate of Authenticity that I (John Humphries) 100% fully back. Libyan Desert Glass and here is my name and address right here in the description.

I have nothing to hide. Libyan Desert glass or Great Sand Sea glass. Is an impactite, made mostly of lechatelierite, found in areas in the eastern Sahara, in the deserts of eastern Libya and western Egypt.

Fragments of desert glass can be found over areas of tens of square kilometers. Libyan Desert Glass is a silicate of mysterious origin that comes from a large field in eastern Egypt and western Libya.

The glass is, by many, believed to have been created as the result of a meteorite impact. Another theory on the origin of the glass purportedly argues the glass is the result of a nuclear explosion. Ancient tools have been knapped from the material and a large carved piece of it has appears at the center of a scarab found in the tomb of King Tut (a piece that has a lot of lore surrounding it and was, apparently, originally thought to be calcite).

Please take your time and don't pay for up to 2 weeks. BOX 310, Tombstone, AZ 85638.


312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA    312.5 carat 62.5 grams Libyan Desert Glass Tektite Meteorite Impact Specimen COA