for those that might be curious the mass of 2656 was broken into 'pieces' - as in 2 pieces. Nelson Oaks has one and I have the other, with a few slices being sold off here and there. If Adam's piece is paired then the bueaty of this stuff really cant be understated - it's gorgeous material. IF anyone wants a piece and 4 or 5 grams isnt enough then wirte Nelson, I belive his piece is up for grabs - or at least it was listed in Lang's auction at tucson...


From: John Birdsell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Adam's NWA 2989 Acapulcoite
Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2006 15:21:11 -0800 (PST)

Hi Bernd...Yes, if it is paired to our new Acapulcoite
NWA 2714 and NWA 2656, then the provisional write-up
in MB90 states that the TKW is accounted for by a
single ~ 7.5 kilogram stone which was apparently
broken into pieces and sold.


Cheers


-John



--- [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Hello All !
>
> I've just purchased my 3.7-gram, extremely metal-
> and troilite-rich slice
> of NWA 2989 (Item #6605571076 - just in case you
> care to take a look ;-)
> that Adam is offering on EBay. Look at it and you'll
> know what I mean!
>
> Adam writes:
>
> "...TKW of 77 grams is recorded for NWA 2989. This
> weight does
>  not reflect any pairings since I do not have
> accurate figures."
>
> It is probably paired with NWA 2656, of which I own
> a beautiful slice
> weighing 0.29 grams.
>
> Adam also writes: "... the lowest price you will
> find on EBay."
>
> And right he is! I paid $290 for my little,
> beautiful NWA 2656 (which I do not
> regret!). Go figure and do the maths what I would
> have had to pay for more than
> 10 times the weight (3.7 grams) of my 0.29-gram
> ACAP.
>
> The specimen that comes closest to the one I
> purchased seems to be the 2.55-gram
> part slice - also very metal-rich and almost like my
> little NWA 2656 with all its
> delicate veins and veinlets. It doesn't show those
> slender troilite inclusions but
> this part slice would be my choice no. 2. I'd buy
> both of them if I could afford it!
>
> What makes acapulcoites, and especially this one, so
> interesting is their achondritic,
> granular texture and, at the same time, they have an
> ordinary chondrite mineralogy.
> That's why you find both abundant metal (similar to
> H chondrites!) and sulfide in them.
>
> Another interesting feature is the rare occurrence
> of relict chondrules, and, as they do
> not plot too far away from both angrites,
> brachinites on the one hand, and from ureilites
> on the other, you will also find grain boundaries
> meeting in triple junctions (120°).
>
>
> Best Acapucoitic wishes,
> and Good Night,
>
> Bernd
>
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