Dear Stephen,

Thank you for your interesting (and important) questions, regarding 
preservation of chondrites (or more general: stony meteorites). I try to answer 
them from a scientific point of view:

> 1.  Can one easily do more than just preventing future assaults from
> external moisture and fingerprint chemicals?

There are not so many ways. The best way is, just to store them in a dry 
environment, ideally with relative humidity <40%, better <20%. Use silica gel 
as desiccant. Important is to change the desiccant from time to time. Don't 
touch interior parts with bare hands as salt will get on the specimen which 
will lead to first corrosion.

> 2.  Will long soaks in anhydrous alcohol help individuals, and polished 
> slices?

It does only help if the specimen got wet before. Then, it can help to quickly 
pull out the water. Otherwise (with a dry specimen) it can even hurt as alcohol 
is hygroscopic (it will attrack water from the air humidity). Use alcohol only 
in combination with a postbake in an oven at about 80 deg. C. DONT DO such 
things with fresh (observerved falls) carbonaceous chondrites like CMs or CIs. 
The alcohol will remove pristine organic compounds and the temperature can 
already alter such meteorites.

> 3.  Has anyone successfully used Steve Schoener's iron stabilization formula 
> for individuals and polished 
> slices of ordinary chondritis (i.e., a mix of water, alcohol, and NaOH)?

NEVER use any chemicals, lacquers, solvents, inhibitors, rust removers etc. on 
(valuable) stony meteorites!!!! All such agents will very likely alter the 
meteorite. Such a treated meteorite is LOST to science!!! And: if such 
treatments have been done and this is not known to the scientist who will 
study/analyse such a meteorites in the future, it creates lots of confusion, 
puzzling question on measurement results and additional investigations and at 
the end lot of wasted time.

So, don't even consider doing such things to stony meteorites - just keep them 
dry and prevent contamination, including fingerprints, dust, etc.!

Best regards,
J�rn Koblitz / MetBase


> 4.  Does anybody know of a good online sources where an 
> average Joe can
> purchase anhydrous alcohol?


> -----Urspr�ngliche Nachricht-----
> Von: Stephen McMann [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet: Montag, 20. Dezember 2004 17:37
> An: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Betreff: [meteorite-list] Sweaty Fingers, Chlorides, and Chondrites
> 
> 
> Dear List,
> 
> Over the past few years there has been much discussion about 
> preserving
> irons, but little discussion about rust prevention in 
> ordinary chondrites.
> However, chondrites can of course suffer from the same 
> problems as irons,
> presumably exacerbated by the same culprits (internal 
> moisture, internal
> chlorides, fingerprints from previous owners, etc.).  Unfortunately,
> chondritis tend to be more complex chemically and so I'm not 
> certain about
> how to deal with these problems in a way that gives display 
> specimens long,
> stable lives.
> 
> Here are some na�ve questions:
> 
> 1.  Can one easily do more than just preventing future assaults from
> external moisture and fingerprint chemicals?
> 
> 2.  Will long soaks in anhydrous alcohol help individuals, 
> and polished
> slices?
> 
> 3.  Has anyone successfully used Steve Schoener's iron 
> stabilization formula
> for individuals and polished slices of ordinary chondritis 
> (i.e., a mix of
> water, alcohol, and NaOH)?
> 
> 4.  Does anybody know of a good online sources where an 
> average Joe can
> purchase anhydrous alcohol?
> 
> Sincerely,
> Stephen McMann
> ______________________________________________
> Meteorite-list mailing list
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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> 
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