> I thought you and the list members might find interesting a phenomenon
> that was shown to me by Marcin Cimala. In cutting an LL5 he found areas
> where thick crust had built up and actually incorporated within the crust
> small angular fragments of relatively unaltered meteorite. Here are scans
> of a slice I obtained from Marcin:
>
> http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v614/CaneySprings/NWA2826LL528gmMarcinCimala.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v614/CaneySprings/NWA2826LL528gmMarcinCimalacloseup.jpgI
see that I have missed topic about my meteorite.Mike, Darren, You are not
right.This part is the back side of oriented stone.When uncut, it looks
strange,it was very unequal. Much different than the other side, full
ofregmaglyptes. This crusted part is here, on third photo on the left. This
ispart that I have cut before
Tucson.http://www.polandmet.com/gfx_nwa2826/000.htmCrust here is thick becouse
of orientation. But I have no idea how thissmallfragments can jump into liquid
crust in the air and they have still sharpedges, not burned. That a very cool
one.sorry, last email was messed up some how.-----[ MARCIN CIMALA ]-----[
I.M.C.A.#3667 ]-----http://www.Meteoryt.net [EMAIL
PROTECTED]://www.PolandMET.com [EMAIL PROTECTED]://www.Gao-Guenie.com
GSM +48(607)535 195--------[ Member of Polish Meteoritical Society ]--------
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