Meteorites Found in Pennsylvania: 8 Documented
Pennsylvania has 8 officially recognized meteorites — 3 witnessed falls and 5 finds. The largest, Mount Joy, weighed 384 kg.
| Name | Classification | Mass | Fell / Found | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mount Joy | Iron, IIAB | 384 kg | Found | 1887 |
| New Baltimore | Iron, ungrouped | 20 kg | Found | 1922 |
| Shrewsbury | Iron, IAB-sLL | 12 kg | Found | 1907 |
| Bald Eagle | Iron, IIIAB | 3.2 kg | Found | 1891 |
| Bradford Woods | L | 762 g | Fell | 1886 |
| Black Moshannan Park | L5 | 705 g | Fell | 1941 |
| Pittsburg | Iron, IAB-MG | 600 g | Found | 1850 |
| Chicora | LL6 | 303 g | Fell | 1938 |
Frequently Asked Questions
How many meteorites have been found in Pennsylvania?
8 meteorites from Pennsylvania are officially recognized in the scientific record — 3 witnessed falls and 5 finds. The largest is Mount Joy at 384 kg.
Can I hunt for meteorites in Pennsylvania?
On BLM-managed public land, casual collecting is legal without a permit: surface finds, up to 10 lb per person per year, personal use only. National parks prohibit all collecting, and on private land the meteorite belongs to the landowner. Always verify land status before hunting.
How do I know if a rock is a meteorite?
Quick field checks: meteorites are unusually dense, most attract a magnet (iron-nickel content), fresh ones have a thin black fusion crust, and many show regmaglypts (thumbprint-like depressions). Slag and magnetite are the common false alarms.
⚠️ Always verify current regulations, weather conditions, and access requirements before visiting any location. Information provided is based on community submissions and may not be current or accurate.
Coordinates are historical find locations from the scientific record, often approximate — not guaranteed collecting spots; verify land status and permissions before hunting. Source of record: Meteoritical Bulletin Database (Meteoritical Society).