Hi, 

For those who have followed the saga of Lovina:

Found in Bali, Indonesia, Lovina was classified as an ungrouped iron in early 
2008; at the end of the same year I acquired the entire mass. Lovina's hallmark 
feature are ziggurat (pyramidal) structures which measure up to two 
centimeters.  It seems these structures formed while Lovina was in solution in 
the tropical shallows from which it was recovered.  I had been offering 
specimens for sale when the Smithsonian expressed interest in acquiring the 
main mass in late 2009—and I first stopped selling specimens when Tim McCoy 
doubted Lovina's meteoricity.  Sales recommenced when new evidence from an 
esteemed colleague of Tim's resulted in the determination Lovina was indeed a 
meteorite. Months later sales were again discontinued—through this day—when 
additional news from multiple sources (Wasson, Nishiizuma) rolled in which 
contradicted the positive findings. 

Lovina bears uncanny similarities to the composition of an iron meteorite.  If 
this wasn't a meteorite, what was it? I had heard several theories, and I had 
gone to lengths to have the same verified. Some scientists felt it was slag—a 
notion dismissed by most. Others would only speak to me off-record, as they 
felt their hypothesis might be ridiculed by colleagues. One thing I've learned 
is that if there is doubt about the meteoricity of an object, it is not easy to 
find a meteoriticist to do more work on it. 

Well, early last year I was so grateful to meet Qingzhu Yin of University 
California at Davis and Yangting Lin of the Key Laboratory of the Earth's Deep 
Interior in Beijing. Yangting's affiliation in particular was of great interest 
to me given a couple of the seemingly rogue hypotheses to which I previously 
alluded. A dinner in Beijing with Qingzhu and Yangting—at which Lovina 
dominated the conversation—resulted in Qingzhu's profound interest in Lovina; 
an interest which culminated in an LPSC abstract entitled "New Insights Into 
the Origin of Lovina, a Mystery Metal," which can be seen here:  
http://www.hou.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2014/pdf/1434.pdf

Verdict: while it was determined not to be a meteorite by Qingzhu and his 
co-authors, Lovina is nonetheless "an important find that is extraordinarily 
rare." The section of the mass with ziggurats has been preserved intact; it is 
certain a museum is in its future. 


All best / Darryl



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