Shall Without fall do drank up in the near future.
The Photo you will show.
Thank you for advice!



MexicoDoug <[email protected]> [Mon, 3 Oct 2011 14:32:40 -0400 (EDT)]:
Hello Alexandr

Continue searching .... you must find something good soon!

The first link is an earth rock, but it is most similar to a lunar
meteorite dues to the brecciated appearance, with some white and
green-like possible.  But there is a quartz vein (a long mineralized
branch of high pressure formed terrestrial quartz), so it is no good.

The second picture has nothing remarkable.

The third picture has some possibility as a weathered chondrite
meteorite. We must know the other stones in that place you found it
to
determine easily if it is similar to them which is a first filter.
Also, you will need to cut ort break off a small piece to see inside
the stone where we can determine morer easily what it is.  In the
present complete state, it can be only a sand-blasted, worn surface
weathered from the desert of a terrestrial (earth) stone, we cannot be
sure.

The fourth picture link, like the third could be interesting, but we
need to look inside.  The weathering (wear) from the climate and time
make it difficult to determine.  It is possible that the brown spots
are caused by oxidation of iron inside which could be meteoritic.

But we need to see inside, by sawing or breaking off a piece and
looking at the matrix of the rock.

Please keep in contact if you find anything also, I would love to
know!

Spaciva!
Doug


-----Original Message-----
From: Aleksandr V. Leonenko <[email protected]>
To: meteorite-list <[email protected]>
Sent: Mon, Oct 3, 2011 1:55 pm
Subject: [meteorite-list] Question specialist


Greetings to all!
In advance I am sorry for my bad English.
For a long time I am engaged in searches of meteorites in the Central
Asia. But stones represented on a photo cause in me difficulties in
definition. I understand that on a photo to judge difficult, but I
will
be grateful to all who will answer.
Whether it is necessary to do the spectral analysis?
They are similar to what kinds of meteorites? (If are similar)

Stone #1
http://s013.radikal.ru/i322/1110/5d/e29015146011.jpg

Stone #1 in Kizilkum desert
http://s44.radikal.ru/i103/1110/88/35b468a88b7a.jpg

Stone #2
http://i078.radikal.ru/1110/3a/606579c65a99.jpg

Stone #2 in Mirzachul desert
http://s51.radikal.ru/i132/1110/57/8009aa5317be.jpg

Yours faithfully.

Leonenko A.V.

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--
Yours faithfully.
Aleksandr V. Leonenko.
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