Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite show?

2002-10-15 Thread Sharkkb8
 
FERNLEA4 wrote:


Al,
only meteorites for us, because all of the bunny turds have been completely
searched-out now (Gregory Wilson took them all during our last Holbrook hunt in
February, and no-one had the heart to tell him ;-) )

Actually,  the bunny-turds have been completely searched out  because several new British restaurants have opened in Holbrook. ;-)

 Gregory 


[meteorite-list] Has Hermes Returned?

2002-10-15 Thread Ron Baalke



HAS HERMES RETURNED?
Roger W. Sinnott
Senior Editor
Sky  Telescope
October 14, 2002

Earlier this month, the Minor Planet Center's electronic 
circular 2002-T14 contained this intriguing comment 
by Timothy B. Spahr: The orbital elements above for 2002 SY50
bear a striking resemblance to those of 1937 UB. With those
words, Spahr was suggesting that a newfound object might be
none other than Hermes, the famous asteroid that whizzed by
Earth just before World War II but has eluded astronomers for
65 years.

Shortly after the Hermes flyby of October 1937, the American
Museum of Natural History created a spine-tingling exhibit 
for public display. Poised above a model of New York City was
Hermes, represented by a ball the size of Central Park. 
Pictures of the scene appeared in many astronomy books of 
the day.

For now, the new object is simply being called 2002 SY50. It 
was picked up by the LINEAR survey telescope in New Mexico on
September 30th of this year. At about 17th magnitude, it was
moving slowly southwestward through the constellation Cetus
just a few degrees from the variable star Mira. The Minor
Planet Center alerted observers via the Near-Earth Object 
Confirmation Page of its Web site, and within a few days more
than 100 astrometric measurements were sent in by amateur 
and professional observatories around the world. The center 
also identified the object with four positions of a moving 
object obtained at Lowell Observatory two weeks earlier as 
part of the LONEOS survey.

According to Spahr's calculations, 2002 SY50 is traveling in 
an Earth-crossing orbit inclined 9 degrees to the ecliptic
plane. Its revolution period is very nearly 2 years and 3
months. When closest to the Sun, at perihelion, 2002 SY50 
is roughly midway between the orbits of Venus and Mercury. 
When farthest, at aphelion, it is well out in the main 
asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter.

But is this the long-lost Hermes?  Spahr commented that 
attempts by him and others had failed, so far, to establish 
that 2002 SY50 and Hermes were one and the same. Further
astrometric measurements will be needed to be sure, and this
may take weeks or months. Both the 1937 and the 2002 
observations yield orbits that allow very close approaches 
to the earth, Venus and Mars, he added, a situation that 
greatly complicates the problem of linking the two objects.

On October 14th, Gianluca Masi told members of the Minor Planet
Mailing List ( http://www.bitnik.com/mp ) that he, Franco 
Mallia, and Ugo Tagliaferri have obtained a detailed light curve
of 2002 SY50 at Campo Catino Astronomical Observatory in Italy.
The fluctuations in brightness suggest that the object is
rotating once every 4.67 hours. To view the light curve, visit
http://www.bellatrixobservatory.org/2002sy50.gif .

Later this month, Jean-Luc Margot and his colleagues at Caltech
plan to make highly accurate radar measurements of the object's
range and radial velocity using the large Goldstone radio dish.

During the next two weeks 2002 SY50 is expected to become as
bright as 14th magnitude, putting it within easy reach of 
CCD-equipped amateur telescopes. (See the daily ephemeris 
below.) As it continues on an inbound trajectory toward the 
Sun, 2002 SY50 will pass 13 million kilometers (less than 
one-tenth the Sun's distance) from our planet in the first 
few days of November.


The following ephemeris, adapted from the Minor Planet 
Ephemeris Service at http://cfa-www.harvard.edu/iau/mpc.html ,
gives the right ascension and declination of 2002 SY50 at 0h
Universal Time on successive dates. Also listed are its 
distance from the Earth (Delta) and Sun (r) in astronomical
units, 1 a.u. being 149,600,000 kilometers. The last two
columns give its predicted visual magnitude and angular 
motion on the sky (in arcseconds per minute). To display the
ephemeris properly, your e-mail program should be set to use 
a fixed-space font such as Courier.

The Minor Planet Center notes that accurate astrometric 
measurements are especially desirable between October 15th 
and 27th.

 Ephemeris of 2002 SY50

 Date R.A. (2000) Dec.Deltar   V Motion
(0h UT)h   m  o  ' (au)   (au)   /min 
Oct 1501 29.1   -02 370.227  1.22115.32.74 
Oct 1601 24.8   -03 000.216  1.20915.23.03 
Oct 1701 19.9   -03 240.205  1.19815.13.36 
Oct 1801 14.5   -03 500.194  1.18615.03.73 
Oct 1901 08.5   -04 190.184  1.17414.94.15 
Oct 2001 01.8   -04 510.173  1.16214.94.64 
Oct 2100 54.2   -05 250.163  1.15114.85.20 
Oct 2200 45.7   -06 030.154  1.13914.75.86 
Oct 2300 36.1   -06 450.144  1.12714.66.62 
Oct 2400 25.2   -07 310.135  1.11514.67.50 
Oct 2500 12.7   -08 210.126  1.10314.58.52 
Oct 2623 58.5   -09 

[meteorite-list] Cottingham

2002-10-15 Thread M come Meteorite Meteorites

Hello all

If someone of you succeeds to enter in contact with
Cottingham the shapeless ones that I am waiting for an
answer through the 2 email that I have contacted, here
the packages are not arrive to me and I would not want
to have lost $600 for null. Thanks.
Regards

Matteo


P.S. I have put some auctions, please inform me if you
see in the Alfianello auction the background with the
widmanstatten patterns and the image into the text, thanks.

=
M come Meteorite - Matteo Chinellato
Via Triestina 126/A - 30030 - TESSERA, VENEZIA, ITALY
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sale Site: http://www.mcomemeteorite.com Collection Site: 
http://www.mcomemeteorite.info
International Meteorite Collectors Association #2140
MSN Messanger: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
EBAY.COM:http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/

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Re: [meteorite-list] Arizona Meteor Crator

2002-10-15 Thread Michael L Blood

Hi Steve,
From the tone of your post, I take it your previous arrangement with
the Barengers (to allow you to hunt CDs on the property, provided they
all go to an institution - was it UCLA? - and be scientifically recorded and
studied, and that you could not deal in CDs from ANY source for a 5 year
periodor SOMETHING like that) is no longer in effect? Did they pull some
shenanigans on you? It seamed you donated a LOT of time and effort
there.
Your opinion is it should be a national park sounds ok to me - I
am still ticked that they are allowed to CONTINUE to hold possession
even though grampa got the damned place under false pretenses by
misapplication of the mining laws. (many of the mining laws, even
today, suck mightily). So, a national part sounds FAR more appropriate
today. They smelted down countless TONS of CD and now act like
meteorite collectors, who actually act as preservers of this material,
are the bad guys.I have no fond feelings for these people at all
(could you tell?) either.
Anyway, tell us the outcome of your previous arrangement with them
that involved so much of your donated time and energy. Sounds like they
did it to you
Best wishes, Michael



on 10/15/02 8:14 AM, Steven Schoner at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:

 --- Tom / james Knudson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 wrote:
 
 HR
 htmldiv style='background-color:'DIV
 DIV
 DIV/DIV
 DIV/DIVI was just thinking, it would be fun, if
 its not already a thing to have a show or a get
 together once a year at Meteor Crater. A list
 meteorite meet.nbsp;Or our own show.nbsp;A chance
 for every one to meet and spend some time talking
 meteorites. Has this been done?BRBRBR
 DIV/DIV
 DIVThanks, Tom/DIV
 DIV/DIV
 DIVThe proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168/DIV
 DIV/DIV
 DIV/DIV/DIV/DIV/divbr clear=allhrJoin
 the world?s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail.
 a
 href='http://g.msn.com/1HM1ENUS/c157??PI=44364'Click
 Here/abr/html
 
 
 Meteor Crater ?
 
 Why the managers there would consider us a band of
 thieves.  They do everything as it is to stymie legit
 scientific collections regulated by scientific
 institutions, (I have a long story to tell in this
 regard) so you think that they would allow us private
 meteorite collectors to have a meeting there?
 
 Just the mere mention of Nininger brings a scowl
 from the managers-- they consider him a thief, and I
 even heard as much said in one tour given by one of
 their tour guides-- yet Harvey Nininger did more to
 reveal the true nature of the impact than anyone in
 his day... after all, his research revealed the
 presence of metallic spheroids, the product of the
 impactors's vaporization as predicted by Dr. Moulton.
 
 And this was opposed by Barringer for the reason that
 he believed that the impactor was still a mining
 resource to be had beneath the south rim of the
 crater.
 
 There is no meteorite there, and the only mining
 that occurs is at the visitor center the entrance
 fees are quite high, you know.
 
 My honest opinion... the crater should have been
 declared a National Monument and made part of the Park
 Service...
 
 That is my opinion.
 
 (And I am sure that if Nininger were here today, he
 would agree).
 
 But as for meeting there, I think the closest they
 would allow is at the I-40 offramp on State highway
 propterty, but not State land controlled by Bar-T-Bar,
 aka Meteor Crater Enterprises (And that includes the
 pitiful remains of the old Nininger Museum)
 
 
 Steve Schoner.
 http://www.geocities.com/american_meteorite_survey
 
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--
Worth Seeing:
-  Earth at night from satelite:
http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0011/earthlights_dmsp_big.jpg
-Earth - variety of choices:
http://www.fourmilab.ch/earthview/vplanet.html
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COLLEGE MONEY
CLICK HERE to search
600,000 scholarships!
http://us.click.yahoo.com/iZp8OC/4m7CAA/ySSFAA/jFYolB/TM
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http://www.michaelbloodmeteorites.com/




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[meteorite-list] Tucson hunting?

2002-10-15 Thread Dave Schultz

   I would really like to get together with some
people during the Tucson Show to spend a little time
hunting for meteorites one day. Friday the 7th. would
be great by me, that way we could do a little hunting
and be primed for drinking margareta`s at the Birthday
Bash, which I think is held on Friday night! Not
knowing the Tucson area very well, I`m sure that there
should be some prime spots one can search. This might
also possibly be the start of another annual affair
during the Show. Just a thought.   Dave

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[meteorite-list] Tucson 2003 Party Announcement

2002-10-15 Thread geoking

Dear Listees:

Between all the talk about parties at Meteor Crater, and the many 
enquiries I have received by those wishing to make advance travel 
plans for Tucson 2003, I guess now is as good a time as any to 
announce:

The Fourth Annual Meteor Mayhem Birthday Bash  Harvey Meteorite Awards Dinner
Friday, February 7, 2003  -  8 pm 'til mighty late
At the world famous La Fuente Restaurant
1749 North Oracle Road, Tucson, Arizona
http://www.lafuenterestaurant.com

As always, your hosts will be the birthday twins: Steve Arnold and Geoff Notkin
As always, Wild West costumes are encouraged but not required  : )
As always, there will be margaritas, merriment, and music by order of 
the town Sheriff!  (Yes, we have booked the excellent Mexican band)

During the course of the evening, your hosts will present the 2003 
Harvey Awards for outstanding achievement in the world of meteorite 
collecting. The judges are entirely biased and subjective, and are 
open to bribes as of today.

If you received an invitation for the 2002 party, there is no need to 
RSVP - you are still on the guest list and will receive one for 2003. 
If you did not attend the the Notkin/Arnold party in 2002, please do 
RSVP to me by the end of the year -- with your POSTAL address -- so 
we can mail you a fancy specially-designed invite.

All are welcome, especially new List members and those making their 
first visit to the Tucson show. This is a unique opportunity to meet 
most of the meteorite collecting community in one shot.

Photos from the 2002 party are available here:

http://www.paleozoic.org/tucson.htm [click on Events on the main page]

And please note the scheduling change . . . for your added 
convenience! The 2002 party was held on the Saturday night before the 
Macovich Collection auction, and some unfortunate souls had to get up 
early and bid with hangovers. The 2003 party is on the Friday night, 
with no functions scheduled for Saturday morning! Aren't you lucky.

Further reminders will be posted closer to the date.

Regards to all,

Geoff Notkin

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Re: [meteorite-list] Arizona Meteor Crater

2002-10-15 Thread Tom / james Knudson

Hello, My feelings are; this is just one of the many injustices against us. How many natural wonders in the U.S. are privately owned? Would our government now days let us americans own something we found? NO, maybe if we found it on land we already owned. But there is probably a law against making money off it. I asked BLM if a person could stake a claim on a strewn field and they said NO, it is not a mineral that you could stake a claim on, Barringer did! I don't know, but I don't like it!Thanks, Tom



The proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168









From: Michael L Blood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

To: Steven Schoner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,Tom / james Knudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>,<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 

Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Arizona Meteor Crator 

Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2002 10:21:38 -0700 



Hi Steve, 

From the tone of your post, I take it your previous arrangement with 

the Barengers (to allow you to hunt CDs on the property, provided they 

all go to an institution - was it UCLA? - and be scientifically recorded and 

studied, and that you could not deal in CDs from ANY source for a 5 year 

periodor SOMETHING like that) is no longer in effect? Did they pull some 

shenanigans on you? It seamed you donated a LOT of time and effort 

there. 

Your opinion is it should be a national park sounds ok to me - I 

am still ticked that they are allowed to CONTINUE to hold possession 

even though grampa got the damned place under false pretenses by 

misapplication of the mining laws. (many of the mining laws, even 

today, suck mightily). So, a national part sounds FAR more appropriate 

today. They smelted down countless TONS of CD and now act like 

meteorite collectors, who actually act as preservers of this material, 

are the bad guys.I have no fond feelings for these people at all 

(could you tell?) either. 

Anyway, tell us the outcome of your previous arrangement with them 

that involved so much of your donated time and energy. Sounds like they 

did it to you 

Best wishes, Michael 







on 10/15/02 8:14 AM, Steven Schoner at [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

wrote: 



 --- Tom / james Knudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

 wrote: 

 

 





 


 

 


 

I was just thinking, it would be fun, if 

 its not already a "thing" to have a show or a get 

 together once a year at Meteor Crater. A list 

 meteorite meet.Or our own show.A chance 

 for every one to meet and spend some time talking 

 meteorites. Has this been done?

 



 

Thanks, Tom

 



 

The proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168

 



 











Join 

 the world?s largest e-mail service with MSN Hotmail. 

  href='http://g.msn.com/1HM1ENUS/c157??PI=44364'Click 

 Here

 

 

 "Meteor Crater" ? 

 

 Why the managers there would consider us a band of 

 thieves. They do everything as it is to stymie legit 

 scientific collections regulated by scientific 

 institutions, (I have a long story to tell in this 

 regard) so you think that they would allow us private 

 meteorite collectors to have a "meeting" there? 

 

 Just the mere mention of "Nininger" brings a scowl 

 from the managers-- they consider him a thief, and I 

 even heard as much said in one tour given by one of 

 their tour guides-- yet Harvey Nininger did more to 

 reveal the true nature of the impact than anyone in 

 his day... after all, his research revealed the 

 presence of metallic spheroids, the product of the 

 impactors's vaporization as predicted by Dr. Moulton. 

 

 And this was opposed by Barringer for the reason that 

 he believed that the impactor was still a mining 

 resource to be had beneath the south rim of the 

 crater. 

 

 There is no meteorite there, and the only "mining" 

 that occurs is at the visitor center the entrance 

 fees are quite high, you know. 

 

 My honest opinion... the crater should have been 

 declared a National Monument and made part of the Park 

 Service... 

 

 That is my opinion. 

 

 (And I am sure that if Nininger were here today, he 

 would agree). 

 

 But as for meeting there, I think the closest they 

 would allow is at the I-40 offramp on State highway 

 propterty, but not State land controlled by Bar-T-Bar, 

 aka Meteor Crater Enterprises (And that includes the 

 pitiful remains of the old Nininger Museum) 

 

 

 Steve Schoner. 

 http://www.geocities.com/american_meteorite_survey 

 

 __ 

 Do you Yahoo!? 

 Faith Hill - Exclusive Performances, Videos  More 

 http://faith.yahoo.com 

 

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 Meteorite-list mailing list 

 [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

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What can you say about a society that says that God is dead and Elvis is 

alive? 

Irv Kupcinet 

-- 

Worth Seeing: 

- Earth at night from satelite: 

http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/image/0011/earthlights_dmsp_big.jpg 

- Earth - variety of choices: 


[meteorite-list] crater

2002-10-15 Thread Tom / james Knudson




Hello List, I wrote this to steve in a reply to his email, but it did not make it to the List: )I don't know if it made it to him either. Any one can answer if they know. 
Hello Steven, you sound like the perfect person to ask this question too! Does any one know how far away from the center of the crater can material that once was in the crater be found? In other words (i can't understand the question myself) How far away from the crater can you find rocks that where part of the ground before the meteor hit? Thanks, Tom

The proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168

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[meteorite-list] martin h.

2002-10-15 Thread harlan trammell
anybody got martin h's email address?Unlimited Internet access for only $21.95/month.  Try MSN! Click Here 

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Re: [meteorite-list] crater

2002-10-15 Thread Tom / james Knudson

Steve, thanks. Have you looked at meteor crater on terra- server.com? It is so cool you can zoom right down to the crater! I found it interesting that you could see an area from the craters north rim that is lighter color than the rest of the desert! It looks a little like the moon.Thanks, Tom

The proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168




From: Steven Schoner <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Tom / james Knudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] crater 
Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2002 14:49:17 -0700 (PDT) 

It has been 6 or more years since I have been out 
there. 

But as I recall, I remember finding a shard of 
Coconino sandstone about 5 miles due west of the 
crater on what was Kiabab limestone. Whether it was 
transported there or blown there by the impact I 
cannot say. 

However, I also found a number of .5 to 20 gram or so 
irons that were definitely the shrapnel variety. Now 
this surprised me as I was not expecting such small 
pieces to be found 5 plus miles from the crater 
proper. And more surprising, perhpas, was the fact 
that nothing larger than 470 grams was found in the 
several square miles that I searched. This was 
consistent with the map that Holsinger had made in 
1909--- no larger irons greater than 1 lb were found 
there. But the small pieces I found interesting, as 
did Roddy and Shoemaker. It was their opinion that 
these were indeed "shrapnel" and that a "ray" of 
material must have extended in the westerly direction 
extending due west and southwest of the crater. 

This is also confirmed with regards to reports of 
numerous small irons having been found 1.5 to 3.5 
miles due west and southwest of the crater. 

As per the agreement that I was bound to (I think I 
might go into the details of this later just to show 
the nonsense and stonewalling that I had to go 
through) all material that I collected was to be sent 
to UCLA and or ASU, which I did. But due to the 
aforementioned stonewalling the main objectives of the 
project remain unfulfilled. 

And now I am too old, and arthritic to complete it 
even if I were allowed to. 

And all the while irons still are being dug up, not 
documented, and eventually not enough will remain to 
make any future collection as I had envisioned over 20 
years ago meaningful. 

Winona, silicate and graphite inclusion questions, the 
Type I, II, and III iron relationships.. and other 
potential questions will not be answered. 

Steve Schoner 
http://www.geocites.com/american_meteorite_survey 

--- Tom / james Knudson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote: 











Hello List, I wrote this to steve in a reply to his 
email, but it did not make it to the List: )I don't 
know if it made it to him either. Any one can answer 
if they know. 


Hello Steven, you sound like the perfect person to 
ask this question too! Does any one know how far away 
from the center of the crater can material that once 
was in the crater be found? In other words (i can't 
understand the question myself) How far away from the 
crater can you find rocks that where part of the 
ground before the meteor hit? Thanks, Tom




The proudest member of the I.M.C.A. #6168








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Photos is the easiest way to share and print your 
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Here

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Re: [meteorite-list] Tucson hunting?

2002-10-15 Thread David Freeman

Dear Dave and List;
Maybe King Robert could lead us out for a mass searching assault on the 
Tucson Ring's brother.  Would make a good
Discovery Channel show and they could buy the beer!
Best,
Dave Freeman

Dave Schultz wrote:

   I would really like to get together with some
people during the Tucson Show to spend a little time
hunting for meteorites one day. Friday the 7th. would
be great by me, that way we could do a little hunting
and be primed for drinking margareta`s at the Birthday
Bash, which I think is held on Friday night! Not
knowing the Tucson area very well, I`m sure that there
should be some prime spots one can search. This might
also possibly be the start of another annual affair
during the Show. Just a thought.   Dave

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[meteorite-list] Orionid shower

2002-10-15 Thread Tom / james Knudson


Hello List, don't forget the Orionid meteor shower peaks during the morning hours of the 22nd.

Thanks, Tom

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[meteorite-list] NEMS still around?

2002-10-15 Thread TektiteDawg

Has anybody heard from NEMS lately?  I've been trying via phone and e-mail to 
contact them for a while now, and no luck...


Randy in N.O. 
IMCA #6118

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Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite show?

2002-10-15 Thread Rosemary Hackney

OhNo  you don't mean it.. ALL the bunny turds every one??
Notanynevernomores bunny turds??
How  selfish  ;-( roflmao

Rosie
- Original Message -
From: Dave Andrews [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: almitt [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: Tom / james Knudson [EMAIL PROTECTED];
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 3:09 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite show?


 Al,
 only meteorites for us, because all of the bunny turds have been
completely
 searched-out now (Gregory Wilson took them all during our last Holbrook
hunt in
 February, and no-one had the heart to tell him ;-) )

 Rob.

 almitt wrote:

  Hi Rob,
 
  but we've found 25+ individuals  fragments between the two of us so
far.
 
  Rabbit droppings or meteorites   :-)
 
  --AL
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] NEMS still around?

2002-10-15 Thread Walter Branch

Hi Randy

I received a micromount of Dalton from Russ today.  Russ and I exchanged
emails last week on this one.  He is still around.

-Walter

---
Walter Branch, Ph.D.
Branch Meteorites
322 Stephenson Ave., Suite B
Savannah, GA  31405 USA
www.branchmeteorites.com
- Original Message -
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, October 15, 2002 8:35 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] NEMS still around?


 Has anybody heard from NEMS lately?  I've been trying via phone and e-mail
to
 contact them for a while now, and no luck...


 Randy in N.O.
 IMCA #6118

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[meteorite-list] More Meteor Crater

2002-10-15 Thread Robert Verish

FORWARD - Meteor Crater related:


To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
From: Scott Huddleston [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, 15 Oct 2002 11:53:29 -0700 

Subject: precision meteor strike :-) 
 

A tour bus operator narrated,
Coming up on the right, you can see the
Meteor Crater, which is a major tourist
attraction in northern Arizona. It was formed
when a lump of nickel and iron, roughly 150
feet in diameter and weighing 300,000 tons,
struck the earth at about 40,000 miles an hour,
scattering white-hot debris for miles in every
direction. The hole measures nearly a mile
across and is 570 feet deep.

 From the cabin, a passenger was heard to
exclaim, Wow! It just missed the highway!


:-))
Bob V.



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Re: [meteorite-list] NEMS still around?

2002-10-15 Thread Tracy Latimer

Last month NEMS got me a really cool slice of Bluff(b), so I'm pretty
certain they're still up and running.  I think Russ periodically gets
kinda swamped, and it takes him a while to get back to people; nothing
personal, I'm sure.

Tracy Latimer

On Tue, 15 Oct 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Has anybody heard from NEMS lately?  I've been trying via phone and e-mail to 
 contact them for a while now, and no luck...
 
 
 Randy in N.O. 
 IMCA #6118
 
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[meteorite-list] How many astronomers does it take...

2002-10-15 Thread RAYDOBOS

(found on a joke page)

Q: How many astronomers does it take to change a light bulb?

A #1:   None! Astronomers aren't afraid of the dark
A #2:  One more than the number of people who vote to keep the street
lights the same.
A #3:  One eloquent speaker at a town meeting.
A #4:  One to measure it's black body radiation at room tempreature to 
verify it is totally dead.
A #5:  Just one, if he can shoot straight.



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