Hi Jeff,

Thanks Jeff for your very interesting and expertized statements on SAU 290. Since I read them, I am also starting to consider my 7.93 g end section just a little more significant than a simple or rare collection curiosity.

Thanks also for providing Gary's close-up of the blue inclusion in his L3.
Even if magnified, it is difficult to guess (from the pic) whether it has a metallic luster or it is rather a "blue stony" (glassy ?) inclusion. I suggest Gary examines it at different reflection angles under magnification to possibly answer that question, namely to discriminate between a hibonite-bearing inclusion (or alike) and some Cu-Fe sulfide (or any other blue metallic phase).
(Btw, thank you and Peter for your kind comments).

Side note:

I'd also like to answer Jeff Grossman's comments regarding the "blue chondrule" we had found in TNZ 082.

Jeff wrote (post sent Feb 7):

<If this is a hibonite-bearing CAI, is it important? There is current research on hibonite in CMs, e.g. http://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0016703709003251. I would contact somebody like Andy Davis at U. Chicago, a coauthor on this paper, and get his opinion if you're thinking of donating this to science>.

That fragment of TNZ 082 was broken in Munich by the team of Philippe Schmitt-Kopplin with whom we collaborate to investigate the presence of organic extraterrestrial molecules (PAH's & O-, N- or S-substitutes) in a series of CM2's, among which TNZ 082 and others. (Btw, our first paper on Murchison is almost out of press. We were notified the the "embargo" on that publication will end beginning next week; I'll then send you the link).

Jeff, I have notified my German colleagues of your wise suggestion to contact the U. Chicago team. They answered me that they are right now being analyzing that inclusion by microprobe just to determine the elemental composition. Microprobe being a non-destructive technique (the sample won't be gold-coated), they agreed that, if of interest, the chondrule could then be sent as such for further investigation to some other lab.
In such a case, we will get in contact with Andy Davis' team.

Many thanks for the suggestion and for all your comments.

Kind regards to all (from the very snowy and cold Alsace, France; apparently, seems we must go above the Polar Circle to get mild weather...?)

Zelimir


At 14:30 11/02/2010, Jeff Kuyken wrote:
Just trying to catch up on some meteorite stuff!

I always thought this one was a bit of an "ugly duckling" but after browsing through a few abstracts I now find myself looking at this one in a different light.

http://www.meteorites.com.au/favourite/june2009.html

Cheers,

Jeff


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Prof. Zelimir Gabelica
Université de Haute Alsace
ENSCMu, Lab. GSEC,
3, Rue A. Werner,
F-68093 Mulhouse Cedex, France
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