Today's Meteorite Picture of the Day: Tissint
Contributed by: Gourgues Denis
http://www.tucsonmeteorites.com/mpodmain.asp
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Good Morning List!
I wanted to introduce a brand new LL3 which was just approved. It is FILLED
with tightly packed chondrules of all shapes and sizes. Many of the slices have
small carbonaceous inclusions, and a few even have a large chondrule with some
olivine crystals in it. I currently
Ruben, call me... I will teach you, my son! :)
Get yourself a PhotoBucket account too! Then , you can share the
pictures all over the place without having to post them all the time.
Jim
On 3/14/2014 6:11 PM, Ruben Garcia wrote:
Thanks Carl,
I haven't yet figured out how to do that
Hi Anne,
The simple answer is security settings per post in FaceBook (FB).
FaceBook posts can be the following;
Public - The post goes goes to anyone. You can see them.
Friends - The post goes to the FB friends that have been approve by
Ruben as FB friends. Only his friends see them
WOW!
Thank you Jim, but really all that No wonder some people call it a
colossal waste of time
Lists.. Groups... How do you find time to manage all that? I
haven't even found time to update my website since I got back from
Tucson. No, I might consider something simple
Toss me some offers. Please have a look here:
http://stores.ebay.com/Mile-High-Meteorites
Thanks
Matt Morgan
--
Matt Morgan
Mile High Meteorites
PO Box 151293
Lakewood CO 80215 USA
http://www.mhmeteorites.com
Find Us on Facebook
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Anne,
Best of all, the sponsor pay for it and this all freefor now.
It takes 30 minutes to set up most of it once a person has a basic
understanding of the featuresand like memost people learn about
these features over a period of a long time and implement these features
as they
I'm with you, Anne, a colossal waste of time. Imagine how productive
people could be in the real world if they spent a little less time
plugged in?
Michael in so. Cal.
On Sat, Mar 15, 2014 at 11:17 AM, Anne Black impact...@aol.com wrote:
WOW!
Thank you Jim, but really all that No
You hit the nail on the head! Thanks Mike. ;-)
(Working on my website.)
Anne M. Black
www.IMPACTIKA.com
impact...@aol.com
-Original Message-
From: Michael Mulgrew mikest...@gmail.com
To: Anne Black impact...@aol.com
Cc: jim.wooddell jim.woodd...@suddenlink.net; Meteorite List
Aras,
Thank you for offering chondrites with shock values. NWA 8330 LL3 is
beautiful and S1. You'll see that I just bought a slice from your website.
- John
John Kashuba
-Original Message-
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
Michael, you can add twitter to that list although I recall you are
quite active on there... ;-) Like i said previously,
different strokes for different folks :-) Each to their own and we can
all enjoy whatever social media we wish, or not. I appreciate
everyone's opinions on what they
I can see why people use FB for business, but imagine if we could
capture all the manhours wasted on Hi5, Friendster, Myspace, Bebo,
Imeem, Google Orkut, etc. and put that time towards something
productive. It's only a matter of time before we add Facebook to that
(incomplete) list.
Michael in
Hi Aras,
Beautiful material.
WTW, if you send the list a LINK instead of the www.. URL
address, just copy/paste the entire URL and most will be able to merely
Click on the URL in your post and their web browsers will open to your
Site. (This does not work if you are on aol I am
Dear List Members,
tomorrow ending on ebay some auctions of rare and perfect prepared irons
(Whitecourt,
Gan Gan, Laguna Manantiales, NWA 6583 , Roundup)
and also a large 11.2g polished Full Slice of Chelyabinsk (pure Impact Melt).
New listed today are some Big NWA Individuals and some
Hello Listers
Thank you for taking a look at my post of meteorites
I have for sale on eBay. Here is your chance to own some rare and historic
meteorites. Please take a look and if you have any questions or OFFERS
/or TRADES, please email me and I'll get back with you. Lastly, if you are
Hello Aras, John, and List,
John wrote: NWA 8330 LL3 is beautiful and S1.
I concur!
John also wrote: You'll see that I just bought a slice from your website
So did I and I can hardly wait to welcome these bumper-to-bumper
chondrules under my microscope. Love those bleached chondrules!
Cheers,
Hello again,
NWA 8330 looks a lot like Ragland (LL3.4) ... both chondrule-wise
and bleached chondrule-wise. I wouldn't be too surprised if they had
a common parent body!
What a meteorite!
Bernd
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Team Meteorite:
David Weir just shared this paper with me. He exuded shock and awe. I
read it, and although not doing further data follow-up, I am sitting
here with the sun setting in the mango orchard, stunned.
Can we get some other discussion about this?
Several groups of meteorites have similar O isotopes, for example, the
Earth, Moon, EH chondrites, EL chondrites, aubrites all have the same
O-isotopic compositions. No one would say that they are all derived from
the same parent body. All that means is that the preponderance of material
is
NWA 8330 is a little more recrystallized than Ragland, although I concur
that they are both likely from the same parent asteroid.
Alan Rubin
Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics
University of California
3845 Slichter Hall
603 Charles Young Dr. E
Los Angeles, CA 90095-1567
phone:
Sure, it's ludicrous.
Michael Farmer
Sent from my iPhone
On Mar 15, 2014, at 4:51 PM, Kevin Kichinka mars...@gmail.com wrote:
Team Meteorite:
David Weir just shared this paper with me. He exuded shock and awe. I
read it, and although not doing further data follow-up, I am sitting
here
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