Hello Marc, Dirk and all,

I agree with you that it's very sad that there may be no more meteorites found in this area and the developers don't give a damn about it, nor anyone apparently buying a property there. Maybe if someone builds a swimming pool they will discover a long buried piece and realize it's not a common rock. Home prices range from a very small home at an average $300,000.00 USD which is very common for Orange County to $10 Million dollar homes and ranchettes.

It's not a community that cares about meteorites, being in southern Orange County, not far from the ocean and just north of San Diego County in Southern California. They are more focused on building homes than allowing anyone to search for meteorites, plus they won't take the insurance risk.

Look up real estate prices at www.realtor.com and look under Wikipedia for general information about the city.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Juan_Capistrano,_California

San Juan Capistrano is known for its cliff swallows. The protected birds are reputed to return from migration, traditionally originating in the town of Goya, Argentina, on St. Joseph's Day (March 19).

The town is in heavily conservative and republican Orange County. They really don't care at all about meteorites, it's sad to say, but just about making money. Remember it's called "Orange" county, because it was once full of orange groves, which have disappeared over the years to build homes.

Politics:
In the state legislature San Juan Capistrano is located in the 38th Senate District, represented by Republican Mark Wyland, and in the 73rd Assembly District, represented by Republican Diane Harkey. Federally, San Juan Capistrano is located in California's 44th and 48th congressional districts, which have Cook PVIs of R +6 and R +8 respectively[3] and is represented by Republicans Ken Calvert and John Campbell respectively. As of the 2010 elections, the city council members are: Sam Allevato (Mayor), Laura Freese, Larry Kramer (Mayor Pro Tem), John Taylor, and Derek Reeve.

This city also has four private, Christian, college prep schools named Capistrano Valley Christian Schools (Pre-K through 12th grade), Saddleback Valley Christian School (Pre-K through 12th grade), St. Margaret's Episcopal School (also Pre-K through 12th grade), and J. Serra Catholic High School (9th through 12th grade). The city also has two private kindergarten through eighth grade schools named Mission Parish School and Rancho Capistrano Christian School. Mission Parish School is located on the historic Mission grounds, utilizes some of the historic buildings as classrooms, and is situated next to Mission Basilica San Juan Capistrano. The other is Rancho Capistrano Christian School, located off Highway 5 on the Crystal Cathedral's south campus. The campus at Rancho Capistrano is also host to meetings and conventions, as well as summer camps.

Hope this gives those of you unfamiliar with Orange County some insight into why the city and the county aren't interested in meteorites, like we are.

Take care,

Brian



Message: 11
Date: Wed, 1 Jun 2011 17:50:30 -0700 (PDT)
From: drtanuki <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] A Meteorite fall site goes under the
bulldozer - Hammer Stone! urgent
To: Marc Fries <[email protected]>,
[email protected], Michael L Blood <[email protected]>
Message-ID: <[email protected]>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1

Dear Marc,
Thank you for your urgent plea. The list may be unaware that this is California`s ONLY known HAMMER Meteorite and thus more "important" for some....
San Juan Capistrano
Capt. Blood does your ship have a crew???

MetSocBul entry
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/metbull.php?code=23128

San Juan Capistrano H6
FALL OF THE SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO, CALIFORNIA, STONY METEORITE
Name: SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
Place of fall: San Juan Capistrano, California, U.S.A.
33?29'05"N, 117?39'45"W.
Date of fall: March 15, 1973, between midnight and 0400, Pacific Standard Time.
Class and type: Stone. Olivine-bronzite chondrite (H6).
Number of individual specimens: 2
Total weight: 56g
Circumstances of fall: The largest piece, 50.5 g, penetrated the aluminum sheeting roof of a carport in a mobile-home park and was picked up on the carport floor several hours later. The second smaller fragment, 5.5 g, was discovered about one month after the fall in the gutter of the carport roof. Source: R. C. Finkel, D. Lal and K. Marti. 1973. Cosmicray record in the San Juan Capistrano meteorite. Meteoritics 8, 365.

Best Regards,  Dirk Ross...Tokyo


--- On Thu, 6/2/11, Marc Fries <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Marc Fries <[email protected]>
Subject: [meteorite-list] CA Meteorite fall site goes under the bulldozer
To: [email protected]
Date: Thursday, June 2, 2011, 9:31 AM
Howdy all

? ? This isn't new news at this point, but the
site of the San Juan Capistrano meteorite fall is on its way
to becoming a "172 acre mixed use development".? I've
tried repeatedly to contact the developers and ask for
permission to search for meteorites on the ground they
clear, to no avail. I offered my time for free so they could
donate any meteorites I found to local schools and what-not,
but they're not buying. The last time I called the secretary
put me straight to voicemail. In case anyone else would like
to try their hand at this, here's the company doing the
bulldozing:

http://advancedonline.com/ares/

? ? Look under "current projects" for "The
Meadows at San Juan Capistrano".? They will be (already
are?) clearing land adjacent to the trailer park where the
only pieces of SJC were recovered. Here's a Google Map
centered on the Meteoritical Society database coords for the
fall:

http://tinyurl.com/3q5oaxa

? ? This development has met some resistance in
the local community and was covered extensively by the local
media.? I do wonder how it would go over if the media
were made aware that this development will probably bury
meteorites from one of only two California falls.

Cheers,
Marc Fries

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