Hello matteo, mike and list.
As far as I am aware, NWA869 will appear in the new met bulletin as an L5. 
My understanding (Please correct me if I am wrong) that it was thought to be 
a L4 but UCLA reguested a second thin section and ultimately said that it 
was an L5.
I have had a few people say that they beleive that there are eucritic, 
diogenite and carbonaceous inclusions in it. I have no idea if this is true 
or not and I dont have the expertise or equipment to find out anyway (And we 
all know how hard it is to get researcher time to study meteorites nowadays 
given the government cutbacks to research institutions).
But several dealers are selling obviously paired meteorites as likely 
something special with possible carbonaceous inclusions. In one case a 
dealer was even passing it off as his own find.
But my personal suspicions are that because those black inclusions are so 
rare in the meteorite (Probably less than 10% of individuals have the 
inclusions) that when it was classified, the thin section that it was made 
from just never had the posible (Or maybe hoped) carbonaceous material in 
it. There are other possible explanations to of course (Including that the 
whole thing is just an unusual and nice L5).
I dont have any other info to shed more light on these black parts of the 
meteorite. There apears to be other types of inclusions in some individuals 
also.
In any event it is one of the nicest meteorites that have come out of the 
sahara that is cheaply priced. Both the cut surface and the outside is very 
nice. I wish that it could be studied further because the possible 
inclusions might really make this meteorite special (But might not to).
Ok, now I will fess up. Here is the real reason for me writing this email 
and response to matteo and Mikes email (Cant you just feel a sales pitch 
coming on now?).
The reason why this meteorite is so cheap is because (1) there is a lot of 
it and (2) I am the dealer with the majority of it and since I am happy just 
selling cheap for a quick profit, then move on to the next meteorite, and 
dont typically hold back large amounts of material to maintain a high price 
or to squeeze every last cent out of a meteorite it has been available to 
collectors cheaply.
In adition I am trying to raise cash right now for a large purchase so I am 
willing to sell it cheap right now.
I will sell this today for $200 a kilo. And I will pay shipping to Canada 
and the United states. No guarantee that you will find carbonaceous 
iunclusions. There is a lot of variety within this meteorite. You might get 
lucky, you might not. But no matter, you will be getting a really nice 
meteorite at a killer price.
One final note: I have a huge number of orders from my website over the 
weekend and am way behind right now with my emails. I have to go out in a 
couple hours for the rest of the day so if I am late with emails please give 
me until the morning to respond.
Cheers
DEAN
www.meteoriteshop.com


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