This dataset is a single-row JSON cache file from NASA meteorites with just two top-level fields, `data` and `meta`. Both fields were detected as unknown-kind structures and skipped by the profiler, so no column-level statistics are available. The file appears to be a raw API envelope rather than a tabular dataset — you will likely need to unnest `data` (probably an array of meteorite records) before any meaningful analysis. Start by inspecting the structure of `data` and `meta` directly to determine the true record schema.
saturn
/home/coolhand/html/datavis/data_trove/cache/wild/nasa_meteorites_20260121.json 1 rows sample n=1 seed 42 2026-05-01T23:18:42+00:00
Overview
| Source | /home/coolhand/html/datavis/data_trove/cache/wild/nasa_meteorites_20260121.json |
| Total rows | 1 |
| Profiled sample | 1 |
| Columns | 2 |
| Generated | 2026-05-01T23:18:42+00:00 |
Insights opt-in
Model-generated narrative. These are opinions, not facts — the stats below are what saturn measured. Generated by: anthropic:claude-opus-4-7.
Saturn skipped this column, so its type and contents were not profiled. Only one row was observed and no unique-value count or other statistics are available, leaving its purpose indeterminate. The name 'meta' suggests it may carry auxiliary or nested information, but this cannot be confirmed from the evidence.
This column is labelled "data" and saturn skipped profiling, so its semantic type is unknown. With only n=1 and no unique count or other statistics, there is no evidence to characterise its contents. The single non-null value is the only signal available.