(Sorry two things I'd like to clear up in my last post)
"...It may not be worth it to travel 200 miles for though for a
weathered ordinary chondrite..."
I meant to say 2000 miles.
And "...and there's meteorites that can be found. .."
I'll change this one to - there's "probably" meteorites that can be found.
If I lived within a couple few hundred miles of this area, I'd spend a
weekend out there hunting.
Regards,
Eric
On 9/24/2010 11:47 AM, Meteorites USA wrote:
Hi Richard, I agree to a point...
I bet if the Claxton meteorite was found on radar people would be
jumping all over it and that fell 26 years ago. Point being, time on
the ground doesn't matter as much as location. A good majority of the
stones might be plowed under in the 3 years, but a good metal detector
would suffice, and there's always going to be material on or near the
surface outside the farm fields. It may not be worth it to travel 200
miles for though for a weathered ordinary chondrite, I get that, but
it's still scientifically important.
This meteorite, if recovered, is still a witnessed fall, valuable to
science in that it proves archived radar is a valuable tool to the
science, and it's collectibility will be there as well. Especially if
only a few pieces are recovered.
Someone close by the area might do well going out there and talking to
landowners to gain permission to look around a bit. It won't hurt and
there's meteorites that can be found.
Regards,
Eric
On 9/24/2010 11:31 AM, Richard Kowalski wrote:
Maybe I'm missing something, but isn't this from a fall that occurred
3 1/2 years ago?
Not that I am taking anything away from Marc's efforts, but if the
stones have been the ground that long, I'd suspect that most have
been plowed under several times and become well weathered. That might
explain why there hasn't been any discussion so far.
--
Richard Kowalski
Full Moon Photography
IMCA #1081
--- On Fri, 9/24/10, Meteorites USA<[email protected]> wrote:
From: Meteorites USA<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New radar post - I suspect that y'all
are going to want to see this
To: [email protected]
Date: Friday, September 24, 2010, 11:06 AM
Looks good! Good work Marc. Funny how
all the so called meteorite people
don't have a comment in 10 whole hours since your post. No
yay, no
nay... Just silence... LOL Maybe they're all packing
they're bags or
maybe already be in the field out there searching... ;)
Regards,
Eric
On 9/24/2010 12:59 AM, Marc Fries wrote:
Howdy all,
I'm quite pleased with this
one. Looks like a very nice meteorite fall from recent
radar data archives:
http://radarmeteorites.wordpress.com/2010/09/24/jacksonville-il-05-feb-07-0144-utc/
Enjoy!
Marc Fries
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