Hi Rob, All,

Steve may have beat me there, I'm not sure.  I arrived sometime in the a.m. the 
day after the fall.

Sincerely, Larry Atkins   IMCA # 1941 Ebay alienrockfarm  

On Saturday, April 2, 2016 Rob Matson via Meteorite-list 
<meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com> wrote:
Congratulations to Mike, Larry, Laura, Josh and Brendan for their 
aggressiveness in getting to the fall location quickly and their persistence in 
the face of very unfavorable searching conditions (SWAMP!) It is an impressive 
feat that anything was found at all, even with the nice radar returns. I have 
one correction: I'm pretty sure Larry was the second on the scene. Steve Arnold 
drove all night from Arkansas to arrive (I believe) the morning after the fall 
-- Monday, January 25. --Rob 

-----Original Message----- From: Meteorite-list 
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Michael 
Gilmer via Meteorite-list Sent: Saturday, April 02, 2016 11:00 AM To: Meteorite 
List Subject: [meteorite-list] Osceola Meteorite is Official! Osceola meteorite 
is official, approved by NonCom and entered into the Met Bull today - 
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/metbull.php?code=63109 Osceola 30�27.16�N, 
82�27.25�W Florida, USA Confirmed fall: 2016 Jan 24 Classification: Ordinary 
chondrite (L6) History: (Mike Hankey, Larry Atkins, Laura Atkins, Josh Adkins, 
Brendan Fallon, Robert Matson, Marc Fries) On Sunday Morning 24 January at 
10:27 EST (15:27 UTC) a large daytime fireball streaked across the sky in 
northern Florida. Over 100 eyewitnesses reported the event to the American 
Meteor Society (Event 2016-266), describing a white sparkling head and plume of 
white smoke left behind. Fireball researchers Marc Fries and Rob Matson, found 
the American Meteor Society witness trajectory intersected with a group of 
radar returns that appeared shortly after the fall. The radar returns were 
strong, found at multiple altitudes and located on multiple stations: KJAX, 
KVAX and KTHL. Larry Atkins was the first on the scene. Mike Hankey arrived 5 
days after the fall with Brendan Fallon and joined Larry and Laura Atkins in 
the hunt. On the 6th day, Mike Hankey found the first stone at 8.5 g on the 
eastern edge of the primary radar return. Within 2 hours Larry Atkins found the 
second stone (18.5 g) directly under the radar. The next day, two more stones 
were found: a 5.5 g stone by Laura Atkins and a 48.5 g stone by Mike Hankey. 
Six days later over 2 miles away from the first find, an 839 g mass was found 
by Josh Adkins and Brendan Fallon. A week after that, Larry Atkins found the 
last stone, weighing 75.5 g. In total 6 stones were found over a three week 
hunting period for a total weight of 990.5 g. Physical characteristics: Thin, 
well formed shiny fusion crust covers the exterior of four of the stones, while 
two of them, the 43 g and the 839 g are matte black. This is likely due to 
submersion in wet sand and/or water prior to recovery. Some small rust spots 
are evident on some of the stones as well. Small regmaglypts are present on the 
43 g and the 839 g stones, and the remaining stones are irregularly shaped with 
little to no orientation. Some chondrules are visible through the crust. The 
interior of the meteorites are slightly darkened due to shock. Shock veins are 
present, some of which are black while others are filled with metal, appearing 
as long "strings" up to 3 mm long. Though most of the chondrules have been 
altered and are not well defined, some rare, large chondrules up to 0.8 mm are 
present. Petrography: Plagioclase grains are up to 100 �m in size, consistent 
with type 6. No maskelynite was found. There are numerous chromite-plagioclase 
assemblages, consistent with moderately strong shock. Chromite grains are 
fractured. Troilite is polycrystalline. Metallic copper occurs as 2-�m-thick 
bands at the metal-troilite interface in an opaque assemblage. The chondrules 
are recrystallized and poorly defined. The only discernible chondrules are 
large ones, 800-1000 �m across; these are BO and PO textural types. 
Geochemistry: Olivine Fa23.7�0.3 (n=21), Orthopyroxene Fs20.2�0.2Wo1.6�0.2 
(n=14). Also present are small grains of diopside: Fs7.4 Wo44.9 (n=1). 
Plagioclase has a mean composition of Ab71.7�1.6 Or8.8�2.5 (n=8); the low Na 
and high K values are a result of shock. Specimens: 21.8 g at UCLA 
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