I'm sorry for going a bit off topic here but I couldn't keep this for my self.

What a coincidens, last week I got a mail from S. Ray DeRusse of Boggy Creek Collection ( although I liked your name better, Bogey Creek lunatics, it's more descriptive).

He accuses me of "Mr. Axelsson is engaged in advancing scientific misconduct and fraud here in the United States and on the meteorite list group which is a campaign designed to discriminate against minorities and others" Then he goes on and sends that mail all around campus to 3 administrators, 19 students and the cleaning department! :-)

The funny thing is that I'm only student on the local university, I'm working for a totally different university.... ooops, his mistake.

Soon I'm in the good company with the terrible people from "National labs includes but is not limited to Sandia, Los Alamos, Pacific Northwest, Oak Ridge National , Argonne National, and others." that works against him.

What I did? I erased two links from Wikipedia meteorite pages two months ago. After his mail I went back to search for more and found two more. Actually one was removed by the Wiki team after my tip with the explanation "link to non-notable junk science/conspiracy site".

Every day has it's pleasures!

:-)

/Göran

Btw, specularite is the name of very lustruous hematite blades.

Martin Altmann wrote:
Hehe,

I'd like the idea, that it could be a specularite.

Anyway, the problem with such people is, as nice they can be,
it is impossible to convince them, that their finds aren't meteorites.
I had several, almost tragic cases, where finders even had confirmations
from different labs, that their stones are very terrestrial,
in such cases they tend to flee into strange conspiracy theories.
Similar to these, how was their name? Bogey Creek lunatics.

All what one can do, to tell them the truth, if they don't believe it,
don't waste your time (only if the finders are in severe danger, e.g. if
they have found, like it can happen here in Europe some munitions or bombs
from WWI+II) it's a free world, where everyone has the right to believe in
what he wants.

Buckleboo!
Martin



-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von Göran
Axelsson
Gesendet: Samstag, 13. Mai 2006 23:12
An: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] fake Mars back on ebay

I have written before about this "martian" meteorite but this is something I sent outside the meteorite list last summer. I've also sent it to the seller but I've never got any answer back.

There is a similar rock only three hours drive from my home. It's suspended in a similar way and makes a chiming tone when struck, just like a church bell. In Sweden we call these rocks for "tonalite" because of the tones it gives when struck. If my memory don't fails me it was classified as a gabbro with a lot of olivine and pyroxene. Some magnetite were also present in it. The source of the rock isn't known, but then we have had a thick ice cap that transported rocks across Sweden.

Here's a picture of it.
http://www.home.neab.net/guest/Tonalit.jpg
... our's bigger...

I would call it a miracle if he got his sold.

  :-)

/Göran

Gary K. Foote wrote:
Hi Darren,

He is different.  I have met him and have seen this supposed meteorite up
close. I have
some crumbs and small chips but have two 6" X 1/2" slices coming to me
soon. I have also
arranged for two more slices to go to reputable geologists to find out
just what it is.
Whatever it is, it should be identified and placed in the proper museum
for showing. It
is unbelievable in person.  I suspect Magnetite schist or perhaps upthrust
continental
shelf shaped by magamtic-granite and magnetite replacement, but that is
for the experts
to answer.  Whatever it is it has a value inherent by its magnitude and
unusual shape.
If it can be explained and displayed to the public I hope he can make some
$$$ for his
ministry along the way.  He is convinced his vision from God is the fact
of the matter,
and I have explained to him why that is nigh impossible, but he has his
convictions.
Truth be told, he didn't preach or try to convert and is eager to identify
what he has.
Still, he will, in my opinion, retain his personal beliefs about its
origin.
Gary


On 13 May 2006 at 14:18, Darren Garrison wrote:

On Sat, 13 May 2006 12:06:19 -0400, you wrote:

Easy - the man tells the truth.  His verification is by personal vision
and he makes that
perfectly clear.  Therefore there is no fraud.

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