> Just yesterday I took a look into my encyclopedia from 1957, the most
> popular one of it's time, found in many bookshelves -there I read about
> the age of the Earth: estimated 3 billion years...

This has been corrected to about 4.56 billion years nowadays, as far as the 
accepted age of the solar system is concerned, but then again there may still 
be quite a few people around, who for whatever reason are inclined to think and 
believe quite differently, something I will not follow here...

Anyway, what still amazes me after all those years of collecting: you can hold 
a piece of iron or rock in your hands which is that (or almost that) old, a 
sliced surface having been unseen and untouched before (well, apart from the 
saw operator, of course :-)), a pristine type-3-stone virtually unchanged for 
billions of yrs ever since its ingredients got together in an accretion process 
just on a scale of a few early millions of years, nothing but an eyeblink 
compared to the age of the solar system - you can even buy it for moderate 
prices and own it, and must not necessarily go to a museum to have a look at 
this stuff under thick glas. And all of this far beyond the age of the oldest 
touchable unchanged material on Earth which is available. 

That´s what makes up one of the meteorite aficionado´s dreams... 

Alex
Berlin/Germany  
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