Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first meteorite?

2007-03-12 Thread Norm Lehrman
Jerry,

A superb and exemplary contribution to the list!  A
great story, informative, and exactly on-topic.  The
links were a great touch.  Thanks and well done.

I still have my first (central Nevada) find, and will
be keeping it till my last rock moves on. It likely
will be the last rock to go. (No small thing for a
career exploration geologist with thousands of
specimens!).  Most of you have seen it, but for any
that haven't, the story, with photos, is on our
website at 

http://tektitesource.com/First%20Meteorite.html

I may be slow.  It took over 30 years in the field
with a reasonably trained eye for the unusual before I
plucked number one from the ground with trembling
hands.  Now, my best single day stands at 49 pieces (I
stopped at 50, but one flunked closer inspection-).

Regards,
Norm

--- Jerry A. Wallace [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi Kevin, List,
 
 That brings to mind a fond memory.
 
 It was in the late winter of '57 and the sun was
 barely beginning its 
 work day
 in West Texas by starting to illuminate the
 landscape through the cold, 
 gray,
 dismal, misty, low overcast morning.  I was with my
 mineralogical mentor
 on yet another trip to raid the agate beds at Marfa,
 Texas.
 
 I was in the seventh grade at that time, so I was
 probably still about 
 13, and
 an eager learner about anything mineralogical. My
 good friend, Mr. V. C.
 Wiggins (a former mayor of Odessa in the '30's) had
 promised me for several
 months that he would take me to the Odessa meteorite
 crater some day, and
 this was the day.
 
 Mr. Wiggins at that time had the one and only rock
 shop in Odessa and it
 was conveniently located only a half block from the
 Junior High School I
 attended. Needless to say, most of my brown bag
 lunches were eaten in his
 shop. Then, too, he had to push me out the door in
 the evenings so he could
 close and go home. He was a fine gentleman that I
 will always miss.
 
 We bounced down the narrow fence line dirt road for
 miles in Mr. Wiggins
 old '51 Buick until we finally arrived at what
 appeared to be a large muddy
 hump in the otherwise flat landscape. He parked with
 his headlights aimed at
 the geological anomaly and proudly exclaimed,
 That's it!  I'm not sure 
 what
 I was expecting, but I do recall being sorely
 disappointed in the sight. 
 That's
 just another example of reality rarely meeting
 expectations.
 
 But what the heck, I was thrilled to be there. I
 took off at a dead run 
 up the
 muddy slope, promptly slipped and found myself
 rolling back down the muddy
 slope. I'm sure Mr. Wiggins was both amused and
 somewhat wary at the
 thought of me getting back into his Buick as a mud
 blob. We worked that out
 later with old newspapers from his trunk.
 
 Once inside the floor of the crater, I was advised
 about more of the 
 crater's
 history and given a mental picture of what I should
 be looking for. In the
 excitement of finally being there, I had forgotten
 to bring my rock pick or
 flashlight from the car. So I took off across the
 crater floor kicking 
 at muddy
 lumps. All but one of those lumps turned out to be
 caliche. This one 
 piece that
 wasn't caliche I took over to Mr.Wiggins for
 identification.  It was 
 about seven
 inches long by three inches wide with tapered ends.
 Turns out that it 
 was indeed
 a part of the meteorite. A very rusty, crumbly part
 of the old 
 meteorite, but it was
 mine.
 
 I then moved to the southern side of the crater and
 began clawing away at it
 with a broken branch of old mesquite. After sifting
 through the muck with my
 cold fingers I found a small black piece of
 something that obviously 
 wasn't the
 prevalent caliche. Another fast run over to the
 expert and I got the 
 good news
 that this was a keeper. I turned to resume my
 muckraking for more keepers
 but was cut short by the order to return to the
 Buick so we could get on 
 with
 the business of the day which was to extract as much
 of that fine Marfa 
 agate
 as humanly possible and still get back to Odessa
 without the expense of 
 spending
 the night on the road somewhere.
 
 As was typical of our agate hunting trips, despite
 our best intentions 
 of leaving
 the hunting area earlier so as to get home earlier,
 we left well after 
 dark for the
 three hour trip back to Odessa. We bounced along
 with a trunk and rear 
 floorboard
 full of the prized agate, and my two pieces of the
 Odessa meteorite. As 
 usual, the
 headlights of the Buick were pointlessly pointed
 towards the stars. That 
 always made
 our trips more exciting by only having a faint glow
 of light on the highway.
 
 So, to keep this short (HA), yes, I still have my
 first pieces of the 
 fabulous Odessa
 meteorite. Wouldn't trade them for Mr. Arnold's new
 Brenham. Well, maybe 
 the
 shale piece.
 
 The solid piece that I recovered weighed in at 2.1g.
 Never weighed the 
 rust. I surely
 had one of the prized specimens that Prof. Ninninger
 and the earlier 
 hunters missed.
 
 The crater is 

Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first meteorite?

2007-03-11 Thread Gary K. Foote
I have yet to find one but I do have the first one I acquired - a 12.3g CD with 
magnetite coating.

http://www.meteorite-dealers.com/canyondiablo.html

Gary

 who still has the first meteorite they ever found?
 I do, a Henbury Iron found in December 1989. It looks like a ducks foot.
 Kevin, VK3UKF.


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Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first meteorite?

2007-03-11 Thread Jack Schrader
I still have the first meteorite I found.  A 263 gram Gold Basin that I
found in 1997.  You never give the first one up!  Jack

-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Gary K.
Foote
Sent: Sunday, March 11, 2007 1:09 PM
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and,Who's still got their first
meteorite?

I have yet to find one but I do have the first one I acquired - a 12.3g CD
with 
magnetite coating.

http://www.meteorite-dealers.com/canyondiablo.html

Gary

 who still has the first meteorite they ever found?
 I do, a Henbury Iron found in December 1989. It looks like a ducks foot.
 Kevin, VK3UKF.


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Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first meteorite?

2007-03-11 Thread Jerry A. Wallace
Hi Kevin, List,

That brings to mind a fond memory.

It was in the late winter of '57 and the sun was barely beginning its 
work day
in West Texas by starting to illuminate the landscape through the cold, 
gray,
dismal, misty, low overcast morning.  I was with my mineralogical mentor
on yet another trip to raid the agate beds at Marfa, Texas.

I was in the seventh grade at that time, so I was probably still about 
13, and
an eager learner about anything mineralogical. My good friend, Mr. V. C.
Wiggins (a former mayor of Odessa in the '30's) had promised me for several
months that he would take me to the Odessa meteorite crater some day, and
this was the day.

Mr. Wiggins at that time had the one and only rock shop in Odessa and it
was conveniently located only a half block from the Junior High School I
attended. Needless to say, most of my brown bag lunches were eaten in his
shop. Then, too, he had to push me out the door in the evenings so he could
close and go home. He was a fine gentleman that I will always miss.

We bounced down the narrow fence line dirt road for miles in Mr. Wiggins
old '51 Buick until we finally arrived at what appeared to be a large muddy
hump in the otherwise flat landscape. He parked with his headlights aimed at
the geological anomaly and proudly exclaimed, That's it!  I'm not sure 
what
I was expecting, but I do recall being sorely disappointed in the sight. 
That's
just another example of reality rarely meeting expectations.

But what the heck, I was thrilled to be there. I took off at a dead run 
up the
muddy slope, promptly slipped and found myself rolling back down the muddy
slope. I'm sure Mr. Wiggins was both amused and somewhat wary at the
thought of me getting back into his Buick as a mud blob. We worked that out
later with old newspapers from his trunk.

Once inside the floor of the crater, I was advised about more of the 
crater's
history and given a mental picture of what I should be looking for. In the
excitement of finally being there, I had forgotten to bring my rock pick or
flashlight from the car. So I took off across the crater floor kicking 
at muddy
lumps. All but one of those lumps turned out to be caliche. This one 
piece that
wasn't caliche I took over to Mr.Wiggins for identification.  It was 
about seven
inches long by three inches wide with tapered ends. Turns out that it 
was indeed
a part of the meteorite. A very rusty, crumbly part of the old 
meteorite, but it was
mine.

I then moved to the southern side of the crater and began clawing away at it
with a broken branch of old mesquite. After sifting through the muck with my
cold fingers I found a small black piece of something that obviously 
wasn't the
prevalent caliche. Another fast run over to the expert and I got the 
good news
that this was a keeper. I turned to resume my muckraking for more keepers
but was cut short by the order to return to the Buick so we could get on 
with
the business of the day which was to extract as much of that fine Marfa 
agate
as humanly possible and still get back to Odessa without the expense of 
spending
the night on the road somewhere.

As was typical of our agate hunting trips, despite our best intentions 
of leaving
the hunting area earlier so as to get home earlier, we left well after 
dark for the
three hour trip back to Odessa. We bounced along with a trunk and rear 
floorboard
full of the prized agate, and my two pieces of the Odessa meteorite. As 
usual, the
headlights of the Buick were pointlessly pointed towards the stars. That 
always made
our trips more exciting by only having a faint glow of light on the highway.

So, to keep this short (HA), yes, I still have my first pieces of the 
fabulous Odessa
meteorite. Wouldn't trade them for Mr. Arnold's new Brenham. Well, maybe 
the
shale piece.

The solid piece that I recovered weighed in at 2.1g. Never weighed the 
rust. I surely
had one of the prized specimens that Prof. Ninninger and the earlier 
hunters missed.

The crater is now a part of the Texas State Parks system and hunting at 
the crater site
itself and the surrounding ranch land has been prohibited. Glad I was 
there in the good
old days. The crater has been turned into a very tourist friendly place 
now and includes
an exceptionally fine visitor center with heating, air conditioning and 
indoor plumbing, but
you still need to be cautious of the rattlesnakes and vicious 
jackrabbits when in the crater
or thereabouts. There is now a modern paved road to the crater with only 
one cattle guard
to bounce over. The visitor's center has a great collection of museum 
quality specimens
of meteorites from around the world. Come take a look. You're guaranteed 
to enjoy the
experience or your money back. Hurry while it's still free.

For a bit of the history, current information, and a look at the modern 
day, cleaned up version
of the Odessa Crater please go to:

http://www.utpb.edu/ceed/GeologicalResources/West_Texas_Geology/Links/odessa_meteor.htm


Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first meteorite?

2007-03-11 Thread Bill
When a meteorite fell hereabouts, I spent a few hours googling and was out the 
door. I picked up everything I saw. Not only do I have the first meteorite I 
found, I still have all the first suspect rocks.

I mounted them all on a board, in a row, in the fashion of those depictions of 
evolution from ape to man starting from wrongest to rite.

Bill

 

 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Sun, 11 Mar 2007 16:08:43 -0400
 To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] HELP ! and, Who's still got their first
 meteorite?
 
 I have yet to find one but I do have the first one I acquired - a 12.3g
 CD with
 magnetite coating.
 
 http://www.meteorite-dealers.com/canyondiablo.html
 
 Gary
 
 who still has the first meteorite they ever found?
 I do, a Henbury Iron found in December 1989. It looks like a ducks foot.
 Kevin, VK3UKF.
 
 
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 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
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Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
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