Hi Greg,
The find order is not necessarily important at all to
science.....although I think we all would agree that would be nice.
That's a hunter thing that does not mean much to science.
Field names and numbers are often in the bulletin comments if provided
during the submittable process.
My suggestion is that the samples studied would be assigned a number in
the order received by the Editor.
This completely eliminates the petty BS that goes on with some playing
numbers games.
Jim
On 1/2/2014 8:40 AM, Greg Hupé wrote:
Hi Jim,
I wouldn't call it "lazy science", but I agree with a numbering system
when possible, but when there are several people from around the world
involved in a fall collecting stones, it can be impossible to get
everyone to go along with the numbering system. Take Chelyabinsk for
instance, impossible to number each stone because of the hundreds of
people collecting.
I think the next best thing is to name/number oddities like the Katol
irons as maybe "Katol - iron 001". Almahata Sitta was a rare
occurrence since one initial scientist/museum had all of the stones
that came out and it was easy to assign numbers, same with the single
dealer who first offered the variety of stones.
Best Regards,
Greg
====================
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-----Original Message----- From: Jim Wooddell
Sent: Thursday, January 02, 2014 10:29 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] KATOL (L6) is official
Hi Greg and all,
I would not suggest another name nor would I suggest it's a different
fall. However I would suggest a numbering schema that maybe followed a
find sequence. Katol 001, Katol 005, etc.
I say that because if stuff is never studied...ie classified....we just
will never know what it's make up is. And, that can and does apply to
any strewn field.
So, everything becomes opinion and guesswork. Lazy science.
Jim
On 1/2/2014 7:24 AM, Greg Hupé wrote:
Since the iron was found with other fresh Katol stony pieces and some
of the stony matrix is clearly visible on the outside of the iron, I
see no reason to even consider cutting it to get a separate name.
That is one nice thing of the iron being collected within a couple
days of the fall, and well before any rains came along to oxidize
and/or discolor the portion of matric on the iron. I think the few
irons should be mentioned in the Official Katol classification,
clearly they are 'pop-outs' from the Katol mass.
...just my 2 Rupees worth...
Best Regards,
Greg
--
Jim Wooddell
[email protected]
http://pages.suddenlink.net/chondrule/
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