Darryl, List, 
I just came across this in my old mail and have a question.
I know you are an expert so, obviously you knew it was not a meteorite by 
sight. 
So, the question is this. Since we know now that  It was determined to be space 
debris from a pervious space mission and I believe they called it stainless 
steel. Would it not still have a great value because it was once in space? And 
shouldn't it still have fusion crust? Why does it not? Where is the fusion 
crust? Is it possible that some metal meteorites do not have fusion crusts? I 
would love to see the analysis of this space rock. It seems to me this should 
argue against a "must have"  for fusion crust. Is this not the observed science 
here ? And are we supposed to ignore the science? This thing crashed through a 
roof and caused significant damage. Do you have any inside knowledge of what 
ever happened to the rock? Thanks Carl

--
Carl or Debbie Esparza
(520) 979-9865
Meteoritemax


---- Darryl Pitt <[email protected]> wrote: 
> 
> Obviously at the outset a meteorwrong....but somehow required months  
> to establish after a team of scientists from Rutgers declared it was a  
> meteorite.
> 
> With no visual or sonic phenomena to accompany the low altitude  
> explosion, which would have been the only explanation for such a shape  
> and striated surface character without fusion crust, there was no way  
> this was a meteorite.  I vigorously pointed out to the local  
> newspapers and Rutgers this couldn't possibly be a meteorite to no  
> avail.  I was on a live FOX radio show where they literally took me  
> off the air after having called me to ask what I thought of the "new  
> meteorite."  When I pointed out that it was unlikely this was a  
> meteorite, they pointed out "And you have a degree in what?" and upon  
> my answer cut to a commercial and I was toast.
> 
> Months after Rutgers put the object on display in their natural  
> history museum---for which they attracted their largest crowds ever--- 
> it was publicly acknowledged the origin of this object was of earthly  
> provenance.
> 
> 
> 
> On May 8, 2009, at 4:27 AM, Meteorites USA wrote:
> 
> > Does anyone remember or know what came of this?
> >
> > http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/01/070105-space-rock.html
> >
> > -- 
> > Regards,
> > Eric Wichman
> > Meteorites USA
> >
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> > [email protected]
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> 
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