Hi Jerry, may I take a stab in the dark and suggest that this sample has
undergone some form of low level metamorphism which has caused an amount of
low temperature minerals to become liquified or gaseous in nature,
redistributing them throughout the sample, then cooling and recrystallizing.
Just a thought after looking at it.
Kevin.
Hi List
I am seeking information on why one would discovered very small crystals in
a chondrite vug. I have photos posted at the below web site of the two
different crystals discovered in a core sample taken from the 75 pound
meteorite discovered recently near Lake Havasu City, Arizona. The vugs were
discovered in the broken end of the core sample -3 inch core 1 and 3/8
inched wide. The meteorite is a chondrite and most likely a H-5 or L-6.
There is a photo posted of a section of polished core about 1½ inches into
the meteorite. In this photo you can see chondrules and iron and nickel
pieces.
Thank for your input.
Jerry
http://www.ctaz.com/~jsbaird/Orange%20Nikon1.jpg
http://www.ctaz.com/~jsbaird/ClearCrystalNikon1.jpg
http://www.ctaz.com/~jsbaird/Polished%20Section.jpg
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