Well, without some sort of mineralogical analysis, there's no way of knowing what you had. There are pretty good models for the dust size distribution in shower debris streams. Most of it is of a size that won't burn at all when it encounters the Earth's atmosphere, but that size can't get to the ground in less than months (and can't be seen under a hand lens in any case). Large enough particles to drift down in a few hours are surely rare: the total Perseid mass that actually burns up is only something like 100 ug/hour/km^2. Even if none of it burned up there's no way you'll find a significant amount in a small pan from one night's activity.

Aside from that, there's no reason to think that Perseid debris should have any significant iron content.

I ran a dust collector for three years. It had a collection surface of 6 m^2, and a water flushing system. The amount of dust collected varied widely from day to day, and was uncorrelated with meteor showers. Much of the dust was ferromagnetic or paramagnetic. Twice, when we had a high amount of material, we examined the dust with a SEM. We were unable to find any particles that showed signs of melting or otherwise resembled the meteorite dust collected at high altitude. In three years, we failed to conclusively identify a single micrometeorite, although we had a handful of spherical particles (10-100 um) that were interesting.

IMO, the dust you collected after the Perseid shower was unrelated to that shower. Statistically, you can't correlate two events from a single sample.

Chris

*****************************************
Chris L Peterson
Cloudbait Observatory
http://www.cloudbait.com


----- Original Message ----- From: "Jerry Flaherty" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: "Chris Peterson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Meteorite List" <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2007 10:14 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Magnetite/Glass Meteorite Balls


Chris I beg to differ with you as personal experience during a very active Persid shower in the late 80's or early 90's produced a sterling[S] quantity of particles which jumped from beneath the water to a magnet and lent themselves to a magnificent show under a hand lens.
Jerry Flaherty

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