Hello, 

after years of work in collaboration with the lab, an interesting result about 
NWA 2968... I obtained in 2005 a bag of individual meteorites, with two type of 
achondrite. A part have been classified as diogenite, with the name NWA 3329 ( 
http://tin.er.usgs.gov/meteor/metbull.php?code=33653 ). For the other 
specimens, 

after sended few pictures, and finally a thin section for direct examination, 
to 

the original lab performed the classification, it was clear I had new specimens 
of NWA 2968. NWA 3329 and NWA 2968 found together? Linked, or not?

At this time, I worked for classification of other stones with Jean-Alix Barrat 
(Angers University, France), the well known french HED lover and specialist. I 
submitted the problem to him. The first answer was maybe found together, but 
geneticaly not linked. After years of phone calls, and studies on my specimens 
of NWA 2968 and NWA 3329, here is the result : 


http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/metsoc2010/pdf/5304.pdf

Formed in different area of the HED parent body, NWA 3329 and NWA 2968 have 
been 

mixed as xenolith in a new matrix (probably mesosideritic host) and have been 
found in the same strewnfield on Earth. A real diogenite and a real vestan 
dunite (the first, the only at this time!) I have for sale : 


NWA 3329 (50$/g) : 

2.30g Endcut
3.40g Endcut
9.73g Individual
11.46g Half individual
13.77g Individual
14.80g Main Mass (individual, minus a crumbs used for oxugen isotopes)

NWA 2968 (150$/g) :

0.57g Slice
1.00g  Slice
1.17g Slice
1.56g Slice
2.22g Endcut
2.60g Endcut
5.63g Endcut
16.11g Individual


Fabien Kuntz ([email protected])


      
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