Hello All:

I had a thought:

It seems to me that chondrules are prevalent in meteorites blasted from 
asteroidal bodies and not from planetary bodies. For example, do chondrules 
exist (or have been found) on any meteorites from the moon, mars or maybe from 
Mercury (Angrites?)? Now I understand that these are called achondrites, and 
thus they do not have chondrules, but it seems that chondrites are only from 
asteroidal bodies (or perhaps comets).  With that said, maybe there is a 
relationship between formation of rock without gravity (or a very small amount 
of gravity); chondrules form initially during the formation of the solar 
system, and then later over millions of years are altered on planetary bodies 
under a gravitational force.

Just my two cents worth.

Greg S.

----------------------------------------
> Date: Fri, 2 Oct 2009 11:58:02 -0700
> From: epgrond...@yahoo.com
> To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Chondrule formation
>
> Hi all -
>
> "We don't know crap..." Hey!, who stole my line?
>
> But that's okay, I can come up with another one:
> We don't know crap about the impact hazard,
> and NASA senior managers know less than that.
>
> E.P. Grondine
> Man and Impact in the Americas
>
>
>
>
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