Hello list
This is off topic and unrelated to meteorites but I hope the scientists on
the list can help me
I need two old articles, old enough not to be digitized but I hope that
someone on the list
can access a library and send me a hardcopy. The articles are :
Bohlin B. (1941). - The
Hello Martin, list
Yes, it's a weathered H4 chondrite and looks ugly on the outside. I saw the
meteorite
and I have some slices. The analysis was performed at the Vienna Museum and
it will
be soon published in the bulletin.
If anyone wants a pice, just let me know.
Best Regards,
Andrei
Hi List
I'm happy to announce a new fall in Romania. After a
fireball seen in 3 counties and sonic booms, a stone
of 6.2 kg was found in a little impact hole. I've seen
the stone, my guess is that it is a L4 based on an
XRF measurment of Fe and a close examination
of the little broken
Hi list
I wonder where is the line between a high metal winonaite
and a silicated iron as in some irons, the silicate inclusions
are winonaitic.
Maybe analyses made on a piece where silicates are dominant
can give a winonaite classification and on other pieces of the
same fall with dominant
Bernd Pauli wrote:
The earliest email I have saved is from Thu, 20 Mar 1997 and it was
written
by no less a person than Frank ... Frank Stroik for those who still
remember
him.
Hi list,
My earliest mail saved is from Sun, May 11, 1997, also written by Frank
Stroik
on vesicles and vugs
Hello Rob, List
That structure is not an impact crater. The structure is located
on Sabine Peninsula, Melville Island. The island is largely
formed of an erosion platform of folded rocks and the structure
you see together with another one located near the shore, a little
to northeast are
Toluca. Saw some identical looking silicated
slabs.
Anyway, great specimen
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: Martin Altmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Friday, May 19, 2006 10:54 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Quiz! - name this beauty
Hola list,
Than must be Watson. Anyway, it's a II E with
silicate inclusions I guess. Unfortunately I'm not
sure about Watson's bandwidth.
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: Martin Altmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: 'Razvan Andrei' [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, May 20, 2006 12:30 AM
Subject
Hi list,
I was announced today by the friends in the area that someone
found two stones, the largest weighting around 400 grams
that seem to be meteorites. The stones were found at about
80 Km away from Comanesti, in Targu Neamt area.
Who knows,maybe it is indeed a meteorite. I'll try to
Hi list
The boom was heard over few hundred kilometers across
Bacau, Neamt, Vrancea and Harghita districts.
There were some eye witnesses seing the meteorite falling
in a forrest nearby Comanesti. I spoked with my friends
from the local astronomy club and a team is curently searching
the area
Hehehe, that's right capitano but what do we know ?
In fact only 4% might be correct according to some
scientists that postulated the fifth fundamental interaction
which has a repulsive character depending on the number
of nucleons. So the smaller mass may fall the first.
Or are there only
I have the hardware to capture and I have also CNN but I'm not
sure about the time difference. Is it 7 hours ? Bucharest is GMT+2
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: Darren Garrison [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Saturday, February 12, 2005 7:33 PM
Hello all
I just talked with one of my friends, amateur astronomer and
he told me about the bolides seen last days over Europe. He
even provided a link of an belgian astronomer (french) :
http://users.skynet.be/meteorite.be/bolide04fevrier2005.htm
Andrei
Hi list
I am curious about how low the relative humidity of
the air should be for the meteorites to be well preserved.
I know the lower the better but I need a reasonable limit
because the air treatment equipments are not so cheap
here. 20 % is good enough ?
Andrei
Here is my phone # :
Andrei, Razvan : +40721241978
I'll try to get there Friday morning
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: Bernhard Rems [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, October 22, 2004 7:21 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] The phone pool
Excellent idea to gather
Hi all
Hehe, Martin, I've already prepared for you a special drink,
'o tzuica buna', I guess you like it, it might be one of the
reasons you came here so often Thank you...
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: Christian Anger [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent:
I have two at the same distance, about 80 Km
Sopot - Chondrite unclassified (probably L4) - fell 1927
Kakowa - L6 - fell 1858
From Romania,
Andrei
___
Connex scaneaza automat toate mesajele impotriva virusilor folosind Trend Micro
Hello all
As far as I can remember, the Popigai astrobleme in Russia is a source of
impact generated diamonds. They are mining diamonds from the deep of
the crater and big ones, not micros. Maybe Ivan Koutyrev can bring some
for sale.
Regards
Andrei
- Original Message -
From: David
Hello
It might a Fe2SiO4 melt pocket not so unusual in shocked chondrites
Umbarger L6 and Gao H5 also present this kind of structures at the
meeting regions of shock veins. I have also a unclassified, unnamed
Rissani meteorite with this kind of inclusion.
Regards,
Andrei
- Original
Sorry for bothering you but wat is the meaning of geometeorite ? A meteorite
is an object. I live in a
geologicaly active region and before any earthquake we can see some kind of
globular lightings a
globular stable plasma of some kind, yet unexplained by science. It usually
explodes with aparent
I think it's KMFDM, A drug against War
Hope it's correct
Andrei
- Original Message -
From:
harlan
trammell
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, April 18, 2002 11:02
PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] name that tune
4 free gao!
this list seems to have
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