Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread Michael Blood
This is entirely too weird,
Even for a hammer freak like me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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[meteorite-list] Meteorite Picture of the Day

2012-06-28 Thread valparint
Today's Meteorite Picture of the Day: Acapulco

Contributed by: Peter Marmet

http://www.tucsonmeteorites.com/mpod.asp
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[meteorite-list] Sale! Rare micros on eBay

2012-06-28 Thread Robert Cucchiara
Hello all, Some rare micros ending on eBay in a few hours currently at low
prices!
Take a look here below!

http://k2b-bulk.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ListingConsoleCurrentPage=LCActiv
estatus=Selling

Thanks for looking! Bob C.


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[meteorite-list] Sale! ebay micros

2012-06-28 Thread Robert Cucchiara
Sorry it appears I sent the wrong link in the previous message! This should
be correct below!  Bob C.

http://stores.ebay.com/meteoritemadness/_i.html?rt=ncLH_Auction=1_sid=3726
7464_trksid=p4634.c0.m309


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Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread Ed Deckert


Wow, I can feel the energy just by looking at the listing.  It makes me want 
to buy a slice of the Tunguska meteorite.  Maybe that'll be listed next.


Ed


- Original Message - 
From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net

To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:15 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts



This is entirely too weird,
   Even for a hammer freak like me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread dorifry

Ed,

Too late, grains of the Tunguska have already been on eBay.

Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum


- Original Message - 
From: Ed Deckert edeck...@triad.rr.com
To: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net; Meteorite List 
meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com

Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 12:02 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts




Wow, I can feel the energy just by looking at the listing.  It makes me 
want to buy a slice of the Tunguska meteorite.  Maybe that'll be listed 
next.


Ed


- Original Message - 
From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net

To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:15 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts



This is entirely too weird,
   Even for a hammer freak like me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi Michael, Ed and List,

I want to say, for the record, that I have purchased one of these
Magical Sexual Tunguska Pinecones from this seller in the past.
Contrary to popular belief, these pinecones are loaded with cosmic
energy that literally oozes from the cone like sap.

With the help of this pinecone, I have stopped using Viagra, I have
renewed vigor, and I have learned to enjoy life again.  Where my life
was once a dark pit of depression, it is now a glorious circus of
happiness - all thanks to this magical meteoritic pinecone.

The seller does not state this in the listing, but the pinecone works
best when it is affixed to a hat and worn on the head.  It looks a bit
silly, and I get some funny looks when I am out in public, but I care
not because I am a walking avatar of sexual power and confidence.  I
wear my magical meteoritic pinecone hat with pride. ;)

Best regards,

MikeG

-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---


On 6/28/12, Ed Deckert edeck...@triad.rr.com wrote:

 Wow, I can feel the energy just by looking at the listing.  It makes me want

 to buy a slice of the Tunguska meteorite.  Maybe that'll be listed next.

 Ed


 - Original Message -
 From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net
 To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:15 AM
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts


 This is entirely too weird,
Even for a hammer freak like me:

 http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
 me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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[meteorite-list] Italian Scientists Uncover Evidence in Siberia's Century-Old Meteorite Mystery

2012-06-28 Thread Ron Baalke

http://rbth.ru/articles/2012/06/28/scientists_uncover_evidence_in_siberias_century-old_meteorite_myster_16012.html

Scientists uncover evidence in Siberia's century-old meteorite mystery
Natalia Ettore, Vladimir Tikhomirov
Ogonio magazine
June 28, 2012

Italian scientists claim they have found the remnants of a meteorite that 
they say created a Siberian lake more than 100 years ago and Russian 
scientists want them to prove it.

Italian Hoax and Unbelievable Adventures of Italians in Siberia are two 
of the most popular headlines for articles about an Italian research team 
that appears to have discovered the mysterious meteorite at the center of 
the Tunguska Event, a mysterious atmospheric explosion over Siberia more 
than a century ago.

Yet skepticism in Russia abounds. What can these sun-loving Italians know 
about our severe Siberian taiga, wondered scientists and columnists.

But it was no hoax, and no fantasy.

Since 1991, a team of scientists from the ISAR Institute for Marine Geology 
in Bologna have been coming to the Podkamennaya Tunguska River basin, where 
the blast shook the Earth. Some of the researchers, especially Luca Gasperini, 
the leader of the expedition, know the local taiga better than many of the 
locals.

I have been fascinated by the Tunguska mystery since childhood and I have 
dreamed of discovering the meteorite all my life, the Italian professor said. 
So, as soon as I had a chance, I put together a team of specialists and we 
went to Russia.

Soviet scientists Vladimir Koshelev and Kirill Florensky were the first to 
hypothesize about the location of the crater; the two pinpointed Lake Cheko 
as the possible impact crater back in 1960. Yet there was no technical means 
to verify their hypothesis at the time. And with the possible crater full 
of water, scientists were not able to ascertain whether it had the telling 
bowl-shape made by the impact of an object hurtling through space.

Beauty and terror from the skies

I was working with an axe when I suddenly saw that, to the north, the sky 
split in two and fire appeared high over the forest, a local miner, 
Semyon Semyonov, one of the few eye-witnesses of the event, recalled at the 
time. At that moment I became very hot, as if my shirt was on fire. I wanted 
to tear off my shirt and throw it down, but then the sky closed, and a strong 
thump sounded. I was thrown off the porch. After that, there followed such a 
noise, as if rocks were falling or cannons were firing; the earth shook, and 
when the sky opened up, hot wind raced from the north, like from cannons, 
which left traces in the ground like pathways...

The news of a meteorite falling in the Siberian taiga became an international 
sensation - a few days before the event, in June 1908, another celestial 
phenomenon had caused a stir, when so-called silver clouds appeared in the 
sky in the Northern hemisphere for a few nights in a row. Those luminous 
clouds caused panic in Europe, Russia and Japan. The Tunguska blast became a 
logical explanation – the silver clouds were called clusters of 
interstellar dust that got into the upper stratosphere from the tail of a 
comet, whereas the fireball was a chip from the comet's core, some reasoned.

There were alternative theories later. In the 1920s, the young Leningrad 
geologist Leonid Kulik put forward a new hypothesis. He came up with 
something quite intriguing: the core of the lost comet consisted not of 
ordinary iron, as many scientists believed in those days, but of an 
extremely rare alien mineral with colossal explosive power. The discovery 
of this matter would provide man with an unlimited source of energy. Yet 
none of the many expeditions to Siberia discovered the meteorite or even 
the impact crater. Moreover, the site that scientists believed was 
ground zero for the explosion had no crater, just dead forest - charred 
trees standing undisturbed, albeit stripped of twigs and bark by the fire.

Discovery at the bottom

Soviet scientists in the 1960s focused on Lake Cheko, a body of water some 
5 miles from the assumed ground zero with an unusually round shape. What 
if the lake were the original crater, which was later filled with water 
from the Kimchu River?  Gasperini said he has no doubt that this version 
is what really happened.

Some time ago, my colleagues from Bologna University and I drilled a few 
holes to take ground samples from the lake shore, the scientist said. It 
appeared that, under the sludge, there was a layer of totally different 
sedimentary formation that we called 'Siberian slush' or 'hairball' - the 
ground was mixed with debris and wood chips. Our experts discovered pollen 
that was hardly older than 100 years in that slush. These hairballs 
offered the first evidence that the lake had only recently been a forest.

Three years ago, the Italian scientists conducted another test: they used 
sonar and an echo depth sounder to make a three-dimensional map of Lake Cheko.

Siberian 

[meteorite-list] 3 billion year old meteorite crater found near Maniitsoq, West Greenland

2012-06-28 Thread karmaka
3 billion year old meteorite crater found near Maniitsoq, West Greenland

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/06/120628164658.htm

http://maps.google.de/maps?q=65%C2%B015%E2%80%B2+N,+51%C2%B050%E2%80%B2+Whl=deie=UTF8ll=65.199164,-51.394043spn=1.730615,3.845215sll=65.257497,-51.836586sspn=0.053957,0.120163t=mz=8

Adam A. Garde, Iain McDonald, Brendan Dyck, Nynke Keulen. Searching for giant, 
ancient impact structures on Earth: The Mesoarchaean Maniitsoq structure, West 
Greenland. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 2012; 337-338: 197 DOI

http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0012821X12001938

  Abstract

A 100 km-scale, circular region in the Archaean North Atlantic Craton centred 
at 65°15′N, 51°50′W near Maniitsoq town in West Greenland comprises a set of 
highly unusual geological features that were created during a single event 
involving intense crushing and heating and are incompatible with crustal 
orogenic processes. The presently exposed features of the Maniitsoq structure 
were buried 20–25 km below the surface when this event occurred at c. 3 Ga, 
during waning convergent orogeny. These features include: a large aeromagnetic 
anomaly; a central 35×50 km2 large area of comminuted quartzo-feldspathic 
material; regional-scale circular deformation; widespread random fractures with 
featherlike textures; intense fracture cleavage; amphibolite–granite-matrix 
breccias unrelated to faulting or intrusions; formation and common fluidisation 
of microbreccias; abundant evidence of direct K-feldspar and plagioclase 
melting superimposed on already migmatised rocks; deformation of quartz by c 
slip; formation of planar elements in quartz and plagioclase; and, emplacement 
of crustally contaminated ultramafic intrusions and regional scale hydrothermal 
alteration under amphibolite-facies conditions. The diagnostic tools employed 
to identify impacting in the upper crust are inadequate for structures 
preserved deep within the continental crust. Nevertheless, the inferred scale, 
strain rates and temperatures necessary to create the Maniitsoq structure rule 
out a terrestrial origin of the structure.  

Martin
 



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[meteorite-list] Oldest Known Impact Crater Found in Greenland

2012-06-28 Thread Ron Baalke

http://www.cardiff.ac.uk/news/articles/oldest-known-impact-crater-found-9091.html


Oldest known impact crater found
Cardiff University
28 June 2012

A 100 kilometre-wide crater has been found in Greenland, the result of a
massive asteroid or comet impact a billion years before any other known
collision on Earth.

The spectacular craters on the Moon formed from impacts with asteroids
and comets between 3 and 4 billion years ago. The early Earth, with its
far greater gravitational mass, must have experienced even more
collisions at this time - but the evidence has been eroded away or
covered by younger rocks. The previously oldest known crater on Earth
formed 2 billion years ago and the chances of finding an even older
impact were thought to be, literally, astronomically low.

Now, a team of scientists from Cardiff, the Geological Survey of Denmark
and Greenland (GEUS) in Copenhagen, Lund University in Sweden and the
Institute of Planetary Science in Moscow has upset these odds. Following
a detailed programme of fieldwork, funded by GEUS and the Danish
'Carlsbergfondet' (Carlsberg Foundation), the team have discovered the
remains of a giant 3 billion year old impact near the Maniitsoq region
of West Greenland.

This single discovery means that we can study the effects of cratering
on the Earth nearly a billion years further back in time than was
possible before, according to Dr Iain McDonald of the School of Earth
and Ocean Sciences, who was part of the team.

Finding the evidence was made all the harder because there is no obvious
bowl-shaped crater left to find. Over the 3 billion years since the
impact, the land has been eroded down to expose deeper crust 25 km below
the original surface. All external parts of the impact structure have
been removed, but the effects of the intense impact shock wave
penetrated deep into the crust - far deeper than at any other known
crater - and these remain visible.

However, because the effects of impact at these depths have never been
observed before it has taken nearly three years of painstaking work to
assemble all the key evidence. The process was rather like a Sherlock
Holmes story, said Dr McDonald. We eliminated the impossible in terms
of any conventional terrestrial processes, and were left with a giant
impact as the only explanation for all of the facts.

Only around 180 impact craters have ever been discovered on Earth and
around 30% of them contain important natural resources of minerals or
oil and gas. The largest and oldest known crater prior to this study,
the 300 kilometre wide Vredefort crater in South Africa, is 2 billion
years in age and heavily eroded.

Dr McDonald added that It has taken us nearly three years to convince
our peers in the scientific community of this but the mining industry
was far more receptive. A Canadian exploration company has been using
the impact model to explore for deposits of nickel and platinum metals
at Maniitsoq since the autumn of 2011.

The international team was led by Adam A. Garde, senior research
scientist at GEUS. The first scientific paper documenting the discovery
has just been published in the journal Earth and Planetary Science
Letters.

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[meteorite-list] AD: New Achondrite Fall

2012-06-28 Thread jason utas
Hello All,
I spent much of the past few weeks working on our website, but a
server crash late last week seems to have erased nearly all of my
recent edits.  To help pass the time while the support folks sort
things out, I decided to re-upload some photos separately and make an
offering directly to the list.

The specimens offered here came from the first batch of stones
recovered from this fall.  We purchased a 155.9 broken stone and
removed the broken portion of the stone (as well as a few extra
slices), leaving the stone ~2/3 intact.

The meteorite appears to be a primitive achondrite with an igneous
texture -- unlike nearly every other primitive achondrite known.
Acapulcoites, lodranites, and winonaites are typically known for their
triple junctions and well-defined olivine, pyroxene, and feldspar
crystals.  The more primitive meteorites from those groups still
contain remnant chondrules, but they are all considered to be
metamorphic rocks, to varying degrees.  This meteorite *could* be
related to those groups chemically and/or isotopically, but it is
structurally distinct and appears to be very unusual.

The overall color of the cut surface of this meteorite is a mottled
off-grey/pale lime-green, with abundant bright green crystals which
are 1) extremely difficult to capture with a camera and are 2) likely
chromium-rich pyroxenes of some sort.  It contains very little
olivine.

Metal is heterogeneously distributed throughout the meteorite.  It
varies in abundance from ~5%wt to 40%wt, and apparently forms solid
aggregates up to at least ~120 grams.

This stone was and is completely pristine.  The cutting was performed
using denatured alcohol in order to prevent oxidation, and this stone
was recovered prior to the fall of any precipitation, which has
apparently been heavy of late.

I have gone through the red antarctic books, the blue antarctic books,
and have seen many strange meteorites since we started collecting in
1998.  This one doesn't match anything I've ever seen.

I don't know how much more of this fall will become available; no new
material from this fall surfaced at the Ensisheim show, so my best
guess is that the total amount of material available to collectors
will likely be limited to a few kilograms.  More could theoretically
turn up, but I doubt that any will be as pristine as this.

The following specimens are available.

-- Part-slices  end cuts --

0.059 grams - cut fragment, some crust, shock vein - $20
6 x 3 x 2 mm.
Photo 1: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.059_gram_cut_fragment/DSCN2207.JPG
Photo 2: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.059_gram_cut_fragment/DSCN2210.JPG

0.105 gram end cut - crusted, bright green crystal - $40 Note - very
small amount of epoxy on one edge of specimen.
7 x 4 x 3 mm.
Photo 1: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.105_gram_end_cut/DSCN2215.JPG
Photo 2: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.105_gram_end_cut/DSCN2217.JPG

0.498 gram end cut - shock vein, good green crystals - $175  Cut face
is not sanded, not quite flat.  There is one rust spot on the
exterior, and the rear of the specimen is partly covered in very thin
epoxy layer that could be easily removed.  A little fusion crust is
present on the exposed face of the shock vein.
15 x 7 x 5 mm.
Photo 1: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.498_gram_end_cut/DSCN2196.JPG
Photo 2: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/0.498_gram_end_cut/DSCN2197.JPG

1.641 gram part-slice with 25-30% crusted edge - $575 Note - minor
traces of clear epoxy on the edge from cutting.  Similar in quality to
full slices, just smaller.  Sanded on one side, wire-sawn on the
other.
25 x 16 x 1.5 mm.
Photo 1: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/1.641_gram_part_slice/DSCN2190.JPG
Photo 2: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/1.641_gram_part_slice/DSCN2191.JPG
Photo 3: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/1.641_gram_part_slice/DSCN2192.JPG
Photo 4: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/1.641_gram_part_slice/DSCN2195.JPG

-- Complete Slices --

1.145 gram complete slice with 90+% crusted edge - $450
27 x 11 x 1.5 mm.
This slice came from a crusted protuberance adjacent to the broken
face.  It exhibits large areas of crust, but neither side of it is
sanded; the larger cut face is very slightly curved.  It looks great
either way - one edge broke along the melt vein exposing shiny 
iridescent metal/sulfides.  Good green crystals are visible on the
wire-sawn faces.  No rust - think the second photo is reflecting
reddish due to the presence of sulfides.
Photo 1: 
http://www.fallsandfinds.com/attachments/Image/Summer_2012_Fall/1.145_gram_complete_slice/DSCN2200.JPG
Photo 2: 

Re: [meteorite-list] AD: New Achondrite Fall

2012-06-28 Thread Chris Spratt

What is the name and exact fall date?
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[meteorite-list] ad/sale many great items...Sutter's Mill, Odessa with UNM numbered, graphite slices...the list goes on and on

2012-06-28 Thread Mike Miller
Hi everyone as you know you can search within my 600 plus listings
here are few you might want to check out.

Sutter's Mill 
http://www.ebay.com/sch/m.html?_nkw=sutter%27s_sacat=0_odkw=item=230807893730_osacat=0sspagename=STRK%3AMESE%3AIT_ssn=flattoprocks

Odessa  
http://www.ebay.com/sch/m.html?_nkw=odessa_sacat=0_odkw=sutter%27sitem=230807893730_osacat=0sspagename=STRK%3AMESE%3AIT_ssn=flattoprocks

Graphite  
http://www.ebay.com/sch/m.html?_nkw=graphite_sacat=0_odkw=odessa_osacat=0_ssn=flattoprocks

Meteorite Knives
http://www.ebay.com/sch/m.html?_nkw=knife_sacat=0_odkw=graphite_osacat=0_ssn=flattoprocks

The rest can be seen or searched here
http://www.ebay.com/sch/flattoprocks/m.html?hash=item4d027b7ce7item=330754129127pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0rt=nc_trksid=p4340.l2562

-- 
Mike Miller  Kingman Az 86409
www.meteoritefinder.com
EBay ID flattoprocks

http://www.ebay.com/sch/flattoprocks/m.html?item=330705933783viewitem=sspagename=STRK%3AMESE%3AIT_trksid=p4340.l2562

IMCA #2232
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Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread Richard Montgomery
After an immense belly laugh (I qualify)...here I am writing!   This one 
takes the cake (although I recently was in a Mariposa mini-store and saw 
pine-cones-in-a-barrel at the reduced price only 50cents...the guy behind 
the counter began laughing along with me and eventually said, People buy 
'em...unbelieveable...


Fossilized cones, although, are an entirely different case.  I've seen only 
one, and it sold for an imense amount of money.  All of us into fossils 
would concur.


Can't blame this guy, though, because at least he's not saying it Fell 
right there at my feetright outta the sky!!!


Richard M


- Original Message - 
From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net

To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 3:15 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts



This is entirely too weird,
   Even for a hammer freak like me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts....

2012-06-28 Thread Richard Montgomery
Unsuspended, unless already unsuspended, is the previous suspension notice 
that this suspension of Tunguska pinecone slices is hereby suspended until 
further suspensions, whichever occurs first.



- Original Message - 
From: dorifry dori...@embarqmail.com
To: Ed Deckert edeck...@triad.rr.com; Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net; 
Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com

Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 9:15 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts



Ed,
Too late, grains of the Tunguska have already been on eBay.

Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum


- Original Message - 
From: Ed Deckert edeck...@triad.rr.com
To: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net; Meteorite List 
meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com

Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 12:02 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts




Wow, I can feel the energy just by looking at the listing.  It makes me 
want to buy a slice of the Tunguska meteorite.  Maybe that'll be listed 
next.


Ed


- Original Message - 
From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net

To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:15 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Speaking of Hammer artifacts



This is entirely too weird,
   Even for a hammer freak like me:

http://www.ebay.com/itm/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=290735387596ssPageNa
me=ADME:B:SS:US:1123#ht_1021wt_1155


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