Hello All,

I came into meteorites from an astronomical background. I started collecting 
meteorites, moldavites, tektites, and impactites in the early 1980’s. First 
purchase was a moldavite, then followed an Australasian tektite, and soon after 
a small, etched Mundrabilla slice. I soon had a hunch I would be hooked for the 
rest of my life: a Canyon Diablo followed, then an Odessa, an Allende CV3 and 
Nuevo Mercurio. And, quite logical, lots of books dealing with meteorites to 
learn more about the subject of my addiction. Among these books the 3rd, 4th, 
and 5th editions of the Meteorite Catalogue, Buchwald’s voluminous Iron 
Meteorite trilogy, Sears, Wasson, Burke, etc. Long before the Meteoritical 
Bulletin Database was accessible online, I had created an extensive electronic 
database of all meteorites (Antarctic and non-Antarctic) and of all impact 
structures then known. In 1987 I became a member of the Meteoritical Society, 
and also got subscribed to the Antarctic Meteorite Newsletter. By 1999 I had 
started collecting meteorite thin sections, quite a few of my first thin 
sections came from Al Mitterling – among them Allende, Estacado, Hassayampa, 
Haxtun, etc. There are now 221 thin sections in my collection. Meanwhile my 
interest has shifted heavily toward moldavites. Last December I owned 29 
moldavites, but this number has now grown to 140 of these bottle-green glasses 
from various localities in Bohemia, Moravia, and Lusatia. A very special honor 
was bestowed upon me in 2013, when a minor planet of the carbonaceous Hilda 
family was named after me:

(247553) Berndpauli = 2002 RV234

Best regards, Bernd


______________________________________________

Visit our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and the 
Archives at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com
Meteorite-list mailing list
[email protected]
https://pairlist3.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to