Hello List,
Several Listees overseas, and here in the States, have asked me for details on 
the handling of the record 12.7kg chondrite I stumbled over in the Nevada 
desert last Wednesday, Mar.3rd. while on a hunt with my friend and neighbor in 
Las Vegas, Sonny Clary and his dog, Brix. 
Sonny and I have already taken the specimen to Adam Hupe' in Laughlin, Nevada 
and had it cut in half. Adam is an expert meteoriticist and had the only 
diamond blade large enough to cut the rock.(24") It was barely large enough to 
slice the rock. Yes, this was a difficult decision to make. I had agreed to 
share with Sonny the other piece and kept the choice piece for myself. We have 
an agreement that what we find ..we share equally if possible. We took many 
photos before and during the cutting to document the find and it's provenance. 
The meteorite was badly fractured from it's descent and weathering in the 
desert and we spent several hours stabilizing the large cracks in it with Paleo 
Bond before we dared subject it to the saw. We had great difficulty blocking 
and securing the meteorite for cutting. At slow speed on the saw, it took 
almost an hour as we watched nervously. Adam did not want to stress the 
specimen. he did an excellent job. No saw marks. Precision equipment. We were 
lucky that only a few fragments fell out and we repaired those. 
Sonny and I are now polishing the respective cut faces. The meteorite appears 
to be a metal poor chondrite. 
After the cut and on cursory first inspection, I saw many good sized chondrules 
1mm to 4mm and localized scatterings of small blebs of metal 1mm+. Adam 
mentioned that the interior looks remarkably fresh. I will have to wait till I 
finish polishing to see any remarkable clasts, or inclusions. Adam guesses that 
it will come back as an L4/5 chondrite. At 12.7kg, it is by far the largest 
intact chondrite recovered in Nevada...my home state. Gross measurements before 
the cut were 250mm high by 180mm wide by 120mm deep.
My half mounts vertically, as it was found, with the oriented face having 
several nice thumb sized regs and protruberances. The other natural sides 
indicate that perhaps larger pieces broke off during descent (slickenslides?). 
As to preparation for display, I will make sure the cracks are completely 
sealed and then remove the excess Paleo Bond with acetone followed by a gentle 
brushing with a hand held stainless steel Dremel to remove only the terrestrial 
accumulations. There appears to be some small areas of primary and secondary 
fusion crust on this forward facing side. It is hard to tell the difference, 
except under magnification, from the desert patination.
What is attractive about this half is that the peak of the rock is prominent 
and the line of demarcation from what was buried shows how little of the 
meteorite was protruding out of the regolith.... like a small shark fin, or 
iceberg. 

I welcome any comments as to my decision on how to handle this record find...my 
first meteorite. To see the find go to Nevada Meteorites.com. Click on 
Hunts...scroll down.

Count Deiro
IMCA 3536

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