<How far from being a qualified meteorite testing lab is a good quality soils, water, 
and air testing lab.   Lab doesn't have experience with meteorites. Would this be the 
limiting factor, or is there much more to the picture?  Lab is fully accredited and 
has been around quite a while (20 years).   Any opinions are welcome.>

Hello Dave and list

   A year or so ago I found a web site that did electron microprobe analyses on 
mineral specimens for mining companies.  I considered contacting them, but before I 
did I talked with Dr. David Kring, LPL, about what it would take to be an accepted 
classifier of meteorites.

   He found it very doubtful that the company I found would be qualified even if they 
were willing.  Basically they would have to do classifications for a while and their 
data would have to be checked to ensure it was correctly done and interpreted.  So you 
would need an accredited lab that would verify their classifications and vouch for 
their ability to get them correct.  I believe Marvin Kilgore did this so he could 
classify material.
   As I recall Dr Kring's problem with the company I mentioned to him was that the 
high through put of analyses and the lower accuracy required for mining data would 
make it doubtful that they would able to meet the requirements of meteorite 
classification.
   The other problem is knowledge of meteorites and their classifications.  According 
to Dr Kring there was a paper published which gave the differences in the H, L, and LL 
ordinary chondrites.  I think it was by Rubin but I am not sure.  Maybe Bernd can tell 
us.  However there is no similar source of comparison for anything else.  So there is 
no readily available logic tree that says if it meets a, b, j, and x it is a winonite. 
 That makes it difficult for someone without a meteorite background to just jump into 
classification.  A logic tree sounds like a good publishable paper to me if anybody is 
interested.
   In short, having the right equipment isn't the whole solution and may actually be 
the easiest part to accomplish.

Eric Olson
http://www.star-bits.com

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