Hi Rob and all,

I've seen the data for this and know there are differences. With less than 10 IIIF irons existing, the probability of two being found 100 miles apart from one another are just astronomical and nearly impossible.

How many times have we seen big differences in the span of a single meteorite fall. Also there are variations in research which can lead to questions on pairing when most likely specimens are from the same fall. I'd say the same is true for this fall also.

While I would like to see an increase in Oregon finds or falls (I've done my best to try to increase them), I am pretty firmly convinced this one is related being a rare iron type. Odds of a stream dumping this close together are ultra rare, unless they came down at the same time. If this is the case then they are still probably related.

I'd like to see more research done to prove me wrong. Best to all.

--AL Mitterling

Quoting Rob Wesel <nakhla...@comcast.net>:

FWIW

This one has been published since June and includes a K Falls comparison in
the write-up

Geochemistry: (snip)These data suggest a designation of Group IIIF, an
uncommon type (with <10 individuals known), although Ga is high compared to
other IIIF irons by ~30%, probably owing to analytical error. This is the
same group designation as for Klamath Falls, which was found ~78 km to the
northwest, raising the possibility that both could have been in the same
strewn field. However, the two meteorites are probably not paired, as
Klamath Falls has a smaller kamacite bandwidth (0.5 mm), and concentrations
for Ir, Pt, and Re that are ~0.002x, ~0.12x, and ~2.8x the values in the new
iron.

Rob Wesel

______________________________________________
Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to