David Calongne wrote: > with a magnifier glass you can see alot of chondrules and > without at arms length you can see red vs. gray breccation
It's high time for you to get a microscope and look at a Parnallee thin section because the chondrules and pristine clasts will knock your socks off! > with bensour with mag. you see micro-breccation and in certain > lighting and angles it seems to appear to have a larger breccation > formation? My Bensour specimens from Dean also show this awesome brecciation and the "mottled" appearance (whitish blebs + grayish matrix) changes depending on viewing angle, amount of lighting and number of lights directed at them. One specimen has a striking FeNi globule measuring ca. 1 mm in diameter. My smaller specimen has a finer-grained brecciated texture than the larger slice. Best wishes, Bernd ______________________________________________ Meteorite-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

