From: michael cottingham [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, July 24, 2006 8:53 PM
To: 'michael cottingham'
Subject: AD: LAHOMA, OKLAHOMA, BEAUTIFUL L5, Never Been Available Before!
Hello,
I am pleased to offer one very pretty meteorite. I have fina
Now that's AWESOME!! A great picture of an outstanding specimen.
Dave
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Monday, July 24, 2006 9:52 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Rocks From Space Picture of the Day - July 25,
2006
> http://www.spacerocksinc.com/July_25.html
>
http://www.spacerocksinc.com/July_25.html
__
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Last one, I promise:
If you are one of those people who they warned about who go on private
property, then there is always the song redone by Tiny Tim (see song 1).
Written in 1929:
http://www.counterpoint-music.com/specialties/tinytim.html
Larry
In a message dated 7/24/2006 3:45:21 P.M. Mountain Standard Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Collectors, enthusiasts, list!
The searching delegation of Chladni's Heirs* just returned from a
6-days-trip in Norway on the hunt for the new fall.
We set up a little website with an illustrated repo
Yes, Martin...
But. if the Meteorite Cartel had returned with
fists full of lovely black stones, Larry would have
had to find an audio of the British Music Hall classic:
"I'ave Got A Loverly Bunch of CoCo Nuts"!
http://www.nearlygood.com/audio/bunchofcoconuts.html
sung by the Monty Python guys
Hi Moni,
if they won't behave, like that European team from a country starting with
"P" trampling through the gardens ploughing up the flowerbeds under the eyes
of the dumbfounded house owners, I wish all success to the American party.
Hmm, the song will work with the melody of
Cohn&Silver: Yes,
Moni:
http://www.authentichistory.com/audio/1920s/Billy_Jones-
Yes_We_Have_No_Bananas.html
Note: the link is longer than one line, so be careful with the wrapping.
Larry
Quoting moni Waiblinger-Seabridge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Hi list members,
>
> Stefan Ralew
> Andi Gren
> Martin Altmann a
Hi list members,
Stefan Ralew
Andi Gren
Martin Altmann and Morten Bilet,
Thank you for this report!!!
Its so wonderful to find out more of this fall without having to spend all
this money to get there, unless of course one finds a piece!
Well, let's see how our American friends will do! ;-)
Collectors, enthusiasts, list!
The searching delegation of Chladni's Heirs* just returned from a
6-days-trip in Norway on the hunt for the new fall.
We set up a little website with an illustrated report:
http://www.meteoriten.com/norway.html
*Chladni's Heirs
was planned to be officially launc
http://www.newscientistspace.com/article/dn9601-electromagnetic-space-travel-for-bugs.html
Electromagnetic space travel for bugs?
David L Chandler
New Scientist
July 21, 2006
Life on planets such as Earth or Mars could have been seeded by
electrically charged microbes from space, suggests a new
Hi Jeff and List,
"I'm hoping someone may know of an abstract/personal/web info on the black
(xenolithic?) inclusions found in some of the NWA R-Chondrites? Any info
would be appreciated either on or off-list." Here is an example:
http://www.meteorites.com.au/features/nwa2921.html
Beautiful
On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 12:55:32 -0400, you wrote:
>Hi, all,
>
>Interesting inclusions - they sure do look carbonaceous, eh?
>
>I recall coming across a photo of a NWA 869 with a similar inclusion (quite
>a while ago now, sorry - no link!), and the accompanying suggestion was that
>it was either car
Hi, all,
Interesting inclusions - they sure do look carbonaceous, eh?
I recall coming across a photo of a NWA 869 with a similar inclusion (quite
a while ago now, sorry - no link!), and the accompanying suggestion was that
it was either carbon or graphite based.
I'm sure this has already cro
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMW58BUQPE_index_0.html
European and worldwide radio telescopes listen to SMART-1
European Space Agency
21 July 2006
In Spring this year European radio astronomers started a test
observation campaign to track from Earth the trajectory of the SMART-1
spacecraft around t
On Mon, 24 Jul 2006 23:38:33 +1000, you wrote:
>G'day,
>
>I'm hoping someone may know of an abstract/personal/web info on the black
>(xenolithic?) inclusions found in some of the NWA R-Chondrites? Here is an
>example:
>
>http://www.meteorites.com.au/features/nwa2921.html
>
I don't have an answer,
G'day,
I'm hoping someone may know of an abstract/personal/web info on the black
(xenolithic?) inclusions found in some of the NWA R-Chondrites? Here is an
example:
http://www.meteorites.com.au/features/nwa2921.html
Any info would be appreciated either on or off-list.
Thanks,
Jeff
___
Hi all -
A superb analysis, but...
In the case of Rio Cuarto impacts, I have been
informed by a tree ring specialist that tree rings
show the climatic collapse dead on at 2360 BCE. (It
would thus appear that the correlation problem for the
Mayan calendar has been solved.)
This dust load should
Sterling, did you ever see a cosmic dust particle under the microscope, let
alone have you searched for them?
I did. I searched for and found cosmic spherules in sediment samples from an
archaeological excavation. (you see: I like experimentation too. When the
results of the SEM investigation o
Hi Dean, Matt et al. and all,
We don't have to forget, that if a special law explicitly mentioning
meteorites does exist in a country, then it is a great exception.
Most countries don't have productive areas, wherefrom meteorites occur,
and politicians and the judiciary aren't different from other
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