Hi Michael,

Thanks for the opinion... Could you share some of the research? Papers, articles, maps, photos, classifications etc...

Though I appreciate and respect it, I just have a hard time grasping or believing a coincidence in this circumstance. Statistically it seems very possible they are related and from the same parent body. In fact the probability of them NOT being related seems remote as it doesn't make sense not to consider the likelihood of a pairing relationship. Or am I just trying to talk myself into it? ;)

Has anyone looked at Google Earth and zoomed out to see how small a spot that actually is? That's like shooting a speeding bullet our of the air with another. The Earth is rotating ~365 times per year, x 11 years that's 4015 rotations of the earth and 11 complete orbits around the Sun. Two small rocks of the same exact type floated around the solar system for millions/billions of years, and crash land within 1.4 miles of each other only 11 years apart and they are not related?

So basically it's a coincidence? ;)

Regards,
Eric


On 3/7/2010 1:49 PM, Michael Blood wrote:
Hi Erich,
         All the research I have found indicates no relationship.
         Best wishes, Michael


On 3/7/10 11:03 AM, "Eric Wichman"<[email protected]>  wrote:

Hi Listees,

Perhaps this is a dumb question... The Wethersfield meteorite(s) two
stones fell 11 years apart, both of them crashed through the roofs of
homes, and both are L6 Olivine-hypersthene chondrites.

The houses that were hit were only 1.4 miles from each other.

Are these two pieces paired? Are they from the same meteoroid stream?

Article on the Wethersfield Meteorite:
http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/met/met_wethersfield.html

Newspaper Article - The Day:
http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1915&dat=19821109&id=yAMhAAAAIBAJ&sjid=Z
nUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=2345,1773959

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
METEORITICAL BULLETIN ENTRY INFO:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----
Name: Wethersfield (1982)
http://tin.er.usgs.gov/meteor/metbull.php?code=24251
Observed fall: Yes
Year fell: 1982
Country: United States
Mass: 2.76 kg

FALL OF THE WETHERSFIELD (1982), USA, STONY METEORITE
Name: WETHERSFIELD (1982)
Place of fall: Wethersfield, Connecticut, USA.
41°42'38"N., 72°40'25"W.
Date of fall: November 8, 1982, 2114 hrs.
Class and type: Stone. Olivine-hypersthene chondrite (L6). Olivine Fa25
Number of individual
specimens: 1 and small fragments
Total weight: 2756 g

Circumstances of fall: Following a fireball and thunder-like booms, a
mass of 2704 g and about 52 g of fragments were recovered after falling
through the roof of a house in Wethersfield, Connecticut, USA.

Source: R.S. Clarke, Jr., Department of Mineral Sciences, Smithsonian
Institution, Washington, D.C. 20560, USA.
Note: The stone which fell in 1971 on the same town should now be
referred to as the Wethersfield (1971) meteorite.

Name: Wethersfield (1971)
http://tin.er.usgs.gov/meteor/metbull.php?code=24250
Observed fall: Yes
Year fell: 1971
Country: United States
Mass: 350 g

FALL OF THE WETHERSFIELD, CONNECTICUT, STONY METEORITE
Name: WETHERSFIELD
Place of fall: Wethersfield, Connecticut.
72° 39'E, 41° 42'N.
Date of fall: April 8, 1971. Probably between 0700 and 1100 GMT, and
certainly between 0430 and 1130 GMT.
Class and type: Stony. Olivine-hypersthene chondrite.
Number of individual specimens: 1
Total weight: 350 g

Circumstances of fall: The meteorite fell through the roof of the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Cassarino and was found in the early morning
suspended in a ceiling. The specimen was obtained for the Smithsonian
Institution by Dr. Richard E. McCrosky and is now in the Division of
Meteorites, Washington.

Sources: Dr. Richard E. McCrosky, Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory,
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Reports of the Smithsonian Institution Center
for Short-Lived Phenomena, Cambridge, Massachusetts (Event number 35-71,
card number 1172 of April 17, 1971, and card number 1175 of April 20, 1971).
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
----

What are the chances of this being the same meteoroid(s) orbiting the
Sun and coming back around in 11 years to smash another house not 1.4
miles from the first?

Regards,
Eric Wichman
Meteorites USA

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