Stan and others,

Acapulcoites, Brachinites, Lodranites, and Winonaites have been thought of as 
being "primitive" achondrites that may have chondrules, especially 
acapulcoites.  I've always thought of these as being "tweeners" in between 
chondrites and achondrites....differentiated a lot, but not quite absent of 
chondritic characteristics like remnant chondrules. Their age signature is 
still from longggg ago. 

I agree (IMHO) with others to say that impact melting alone does not make an 
achondrite. It is primarily a function of differentiation.

John


-------------- Original message from "stan ." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>: 
-------------- 


> 
> 
> > 
> >Achondrites - (a-kon-drites) meteorites whose composition has been 
> >significantly altered from the early/primative chondritic material. 
> >Chondrules are not present. 
> 
> you cant say that because some achonderites contain chondrules - i have an 
> end cut of dhofar 125, an acapulcoite that has a chondrule or two visable 
> 
> 
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