If you contact Adam directly for a purchase, please let me know so I can mark 
it as sold on the website.

Mendy Ouzillou

On Mar 10, 2014, at 12:34 PM, Mendy Ouzillou <[email protected]> wrote:



Hello everyone, The NWA desert continues to thrill us this with unique and 
amazing specimens. NWA 8276 is just such a meteorite. It is the second L3.00 
and is "possibly" paired to NWA 7731. NWA 8276 features a rich, black crust and 
a yellowish matrix densely packed with chondrules. Extensive analysis by Dr. 
Carl Agee and Karen Ziegler support the 3.00 classification - a classification 
that indicates no heat or aqueous alteration of any kind (at least as far as 
can be presently evaluated). In fact, this meteorite represents material from 
the earliest history of our solar system. Older than CAIs? Not sure, but maybe 
Dr. Agee can chime in.

The complete writeup may be found here: 
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/metbull.php?sea=3.00&sfor=types&ants=&falls=&valids=&stype=contains&lrec=50&map=ge&browse=&country=All&srt=name&categ=All&mblist=All&rect=&phot=&snew=0&pnt=Normal%20table&code=59487

The
explanation how this meteorite was identified makes for a short but very good 
read (from MetBull):
"Adam Bates identified this meteorite from images he received as a possible 
pairing to NWA 7731,even though they came from a different Moroccan meteorite 
dealer. Both pieces were then purchased within a few weeks of each other in 
October 2013."

Adam Bates and I partnered on half the stone and anxiously awaited for Dr. 
Agee's results. It was not a given that this was in fact paired with NWA 7731, 
especially since the meteorite was bought from a completely different dealer. 
There were visual differences in the stone that led Carl to initially believe 
that 8276 may be different from 7731. In the end, the classification came back 
as L3.00 but with enough differences to state that NWA 8276 is "possibly" 
paired with NWA 7731. The terrestrial weathering is also
quite low and only an W1.

Many people state meteorites as being rare, but some are certainly rarer than 
others. The type 3.00 classification has only been given to 3 meteorites: 
Semarkona (LL3.00), NWA 7731 (L3.00) and now NWA 8276 (L3.00). Here is an 
excerpt from Dr. Agee's FB discussion with David Weir on the 3.00 
classification and the rarity of this material:
"Grossman and Brearley (2005)define the subtypes less than 3.2 as 3.15, 3.10, 
3.05, and 3.00. [This scale is] primarily based on the mean value and standard 
deviation of Cr2O3 in coarse ferroan chondrule olivines. I'm not saying that 
the Grossman and Brearley scheme is the ultimate, but it is simply the standard 
currently. What will really improve the subtype 3 nomenclature (and 
understanding of unequilibrated OCs) are more samples like NWA 7731 and NWA 
8276. Up to now we have so few in the 3.15-3.00 range that the statistics of 
small numbers makes it hard to have meaningful subdivisions. I would gladly use 
an even finer scale (i.e. 3.01, 3.02, 3.03, 3.04 etc.) if it were actually 
established. The Grossman and Brearley (2005) scale is the only one that exists 
with any sort of sampling to anchor it. We just have too few samples to 
establish a finer scale. And when one starts talking about all the possible 
subtle differences around 3.00, I'm not sure if a
numerical, linear scale would even make sense. The nice thing about discovering 
more of these very low type 3s is that more  will hopefully be available for 
research. Semarkona, because much of it  resides in India and some at the 
Smithsonian (I believe), it is hard to get a hold of. For example we only have 
a couple thin sections of Semarkona at UNM -- not even a tiny fragment!" 


The items for sale (and pricing) may be viewed at 
http://www.meteoritesusa.com/meteorites-for-sale-4/nwa-8276-l3-00-w1-a-remarkable-and-scientifically-important-meteorite/
 


The photos have had no color manipulation and represent the true colors of this 
meteorite as viewed under studio lighting (5500K). Anyone interested in 
acquiring material may contact me by responding privately to this email or to 
Adam Bates ([email protected]). The transaction and any associated details 
will be kept strictly confidential.  


Regards,

Mendy Ouzillou  
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