1 The Mysterious Tektite featuring a recent Australite Collection from the Port Campbell region, Victoria, Australia. John Iwaszko Fossickers:- (JH), Amber Iwaszko (AI) Jasmin Iwaszko (JII) , John Iwaszko (JI) and Adam Wasco (AW) Photography by JH, John Iwaszko and Adam Wasco Abstract. Recently discovered Australites from Port Campbell on the south coast of Western Victoria, Australia prove that there are still many to be discovered even after all the heavy fossicking done over a period of a century. Australites by current generally accepted belief are thought to have formed by a south East Asian comet or meteorite impact that still remains to be discovered. These were projected into a low orbit and then re-entered the atmosphere at high speed, from the aftermath of the supposed impact. Drops of molten material caused tektites to rain down like a hailstorm across Australia, finally resting over a wide area known as a strewnfield. The forms of Australian tektites are rare and unique and some have formed perfect button shapes representing that the final ablation products are originally from somewhat larger specimens that became modified by aerodynamical heating during a high speed transit and long journey through the earth’s atmosphere. This paper is a discussion and correlation of the utilisation of tektites and includes many other proposed theories throughout history that are not only interesting but also entertaining. Recent finds are also documented in an effort to deduce the rate of erosion that exposes new tektites in the Port Campbell region over time, from recent expeditions which are recorded to precise locations. Previous finds by others are also included graphically but were often only reported as general sites with approximate dates so can only be averaged based on the historical documented records available. One future goal is to address the problem that some of the finds appear so fresh in comparison to glass shrapnel from beer and lemonade glass left in the same regions, which date back to less than 100 years, that it appears impossible that the current view of the age of the fall of 0.8 million years is the result of an impact in Indochina.