Dear Kent, List;
Try this one...take off your shoe and sock, and drop a charcoal 
briquette from the height of an average dinner table....on to the top of 
your foot.  It will not injure you but it will leave a red mark and 
cause you to utter #*!!%% at me for being so stupid!   Now think what it 
would do if dropped from the height of a roof.    We have simulated a 
charcoal briquette dropping from a roof and we think it smarts like you 
know what when it hit the simulated foot (in this case a loaf of bread). 
 I am not about to give my body part to scientific experimentation.
I see no validity of a rock falling from about any height and not 
causing great personal damage to any part of a person's body.
The Sylacauga, Alabama lady  (1954) got a big purple  spot from her 
experience and that was after the real meteorite came through the roof 
and ceiling, and  bounced off   the radio before it hit her...and she 
was protected by two thick quilts!  

For those interested, turn to page 85 in second edition  of your copy 
of  Rocks From Space.
...ouch, OUCH!
Dave F.

magellon wrote:

> Siobhan Cowton says  "I thought it was a stone, but it looked
> very unusual, with a bubbled surface and lots of tiny indentations
> - a bit like volcanic lava."
> Lightened photo 
> <http://home.earthlink.net/%7Emagellon/wrongs/Siobhan.jpg>
> After looking at the photo, I have to agree with Miss Cowton. It does
> look like volcanic lava. Perhaps a piece recently removed from 
> someone's outdoor barbecue.
> (I have a bunch of these available with black crust [burnt sauce]!!!!- 
> Just like photo)
> If she waits till after it is examined to sell it,  I'm afraid she 
> will not get enough $ for a new
> bottle of nail polish.
> Best,
> Ken Newton
> Photo's Dark? <http://home.earthlink.net/%7Emagellon/DKPHOTO.html>
>  
>  
>
> Keith wrote:
>
>> There are more details about this incident and
>> a picture in teh article "Teenager 'struck by meteorite'"
>>
>> It stated:
>>
>> "A North Yorkshire teenager is convinced she has
>> been hit by a meteorite which could be billions of
>> years old.
>>
>> Siobhan Cowton says the small lump of warm rock
>>  fell from the sky over Northallerton and landed on
>> her foot."
>> http://www.ananova.com/news/story/sm_658058.html?menu=news.scienceanddiscovery 
>>
>>
>> http://www.ananova.com/images/web/27102.jpg
>>
>> The "meteorite" looks like a piece of coal slag.
>> But I could be wrong.
>>
>> Have Fun
>>
>> Keith
>> New Orleans, LA
>>
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>>



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