[meteorite-list] Hammer time in Thailand?!

2016-06-28 Thread Art via Meteorite-list
2 recent artices:

http://www.slate.com/blogs/bad_astronomy/2016/06/28/small_meteorite_hits_house_in_thailand.html

http://metro.co.uk/2016/06/28/meteorites-smash-into-familys-home-as-theyre-eating-breakfast-5972086/

-Art
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[meteorite-list] Hammer Stones

2013-03-30 Thread Count Deiro
The sale of Chelyabinsk hammer stones is hereby suspended until further notice.

Count Deiro
IMCA 3536
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[meteorite-list] Hammer Fall

2012-06-17 Thread Ed Majden
   As a retired RCAF Radar Tech, I always thought a Hammer Fall was the 
result of a careless tech leaving a hammer on the wing of an aircraft just 
before a scramble.  Hammers were often used to fine tune Hughes built radar 
sets like the old MG-2, ha! ha!

Ed Majden
Courtenay, B.C.


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Fall

2012-06-17 Thread GeoZay
As a retired RCAF Radar Tech, I always  thought a Hammer Fall was the 
result of a careless tech leaving a hammer  on the wing of an aircraft 
just 
before a scramble.  Hammers were often  used to fine tune Hughes built 
radar 
sets like the old MG-2, ha! ha!
Ed  Majden

That reminds me of the time when I was changing out the HF  radio coupler 
on a B-52 around midnight. The coupler is located high up on the  tail. The 
plane was scheduled to take off at the crack of dawn and I was just  
finishing up when I dropped a large crescent wrench. I watched it tumble end  
over 
end when the tail gunner canopy got smacked by the wrench and made a small  
crack. My heart sank, but not as much as the crew chiefs did. I was done with 
 the radio, but he had to stay out there till the entire ton and a half 
tail  gunner section was replaced. I'm glad it wasn't taken out of my pay 
check...I'd  still be paying for it. :O)
GeoZay  

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Fall

2012-06-17 Thread James Beauchamp
Ex C-130 avionics guy here. Nothing like that sinking heart feeling at the 
sound of a socket bouncing around as it falls down the vertical stab.  Always 
at 2 AM. Always when it's raining or windy and cold.

Have a huge respect for crew dogs. Partly for the fortitude of working until 
the job is done. Mostly for not killing specialists at 2 AM. Lord knows I 
deserved it on several occasions.

James

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 17, 2012, at 12:19 PM, geo...@aol.com wrote:

 As a retired RCAF Radar Tech, I always  thought a Hammer Fall was the 
 result of a careless tech leaving a hammer  on the wing of an aircraft 
 just 
 before a scramble.  Hammers were often  used to fine tune Hughes built 
 radar 
 sets like the old MG-2, ha! ha!
 Ed  Majden
 
 That reminds me of the time when I was changing out the HF  radio coupler 
 on a B-52 around midnight. The coupler is located high up on the  tail. The 
 plane was scheduled to take off at the crack of dawn and I was just  
 finishing up when I dropped a large crescent wrench. I watched it tumble end  
 over 
 end when the tail gunner canopy got smacked by the wrench and made a small  
 crack. My heart sank, but not as much as the crew chiefs did. I was done with 
 the radio, but he had to stay out there till the entire ton and a half 
 tail  gunner section was replaced. I'm glad it wasn't taken out of my pay 
 check...I'd  still be paying for it. :O)
 GeoZay  
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Fall

2012-06-17 Thread Richard Montgomery
James, the respect is for you and all your and my friends serving.  THANK 
YOU!


- Original Message - 
From: James Beauchamp falco...@sbcglobal.net

To: geo...@aol.com
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Sunday, June 17, 2012 1:14 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Fall


Ex C-130 avionics guy here. Nothing like that sinking heart feeling at the 
sound of a socket bouncing around as it falls down the vertical stab. 
Always at 2 AM. Always when it's raining or windy and cold.


Have a huge respect for crew dogs. Partly for the fortitude of working 
until the job is done. Mostly for not killing specialists at 2 AM. Lord 
knows I deserved it on several occasions.


James

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 17, 2012, at 12:19 PM, geo...@aol.com wrote:


As a retired RCAF Radar Tech, I always  thought a Hammer Fall was the

result of a careless tech leaving a hammer  on the wing of an aircraft
just
before a scramble.  Hammers were often  used to fine tune Hughes built
radar
sets like the old MG-2, ha! ha!
Ed  Majden

That reminds me of the time when I was changing out the HF  radio coupler
on a B-52 around midnight. The coupler is located high up on the  tail. 
The

plane was scheduled to take off at the crack of dawn and I was just
finishing up when I dropped a large crescent wrench. I watched it tumble 
end  over
end when the tail gunner canopy got smacked by the wrench and made a 
small
crack. My heart sank, but not as much as the crew chiefs did. I was done 
with

the radio, but he had to stay out there till the entire ton and a half
tail  gunner section was replaced. I'm glad it wasn't taken out of my pay
check...I'd  still be paying for it. :O)
GeoZay

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-16 Thread Michael Farmer
How do you come up with this? I was at the New Orleans house 40 hours after t 
fell. While it was not seen to hit the house, the homeowner had gone to work at 
7 am and returned home at 5 pm finding his house full of rocks and destruction. 
The neighbors reported huge crashing noise like a car accident at ~4  pm I 
think, and several airline pilots reported a fireball. 
I am pretty sure that the fact that the meteorite went through 3 floors that 
day  
That the noncom had enough evidence to know that the New Orleans meteorite  
fell on that date between the hours of 7 am and 5 pm.

How can you guys take the simplest thing like fall and find and yap about it 
for days?

Perhaps some people need to try knitting for a hobby, seems less controversial.
Michael Farmer 

Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 14, 2012, at 9:09 PM, Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com wrote:

 Hi John and List,
 
 Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
 Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.
 
 All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
 to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
 hammer or a fall.
 
 Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
 unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
 meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
 destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
 and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
 particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
 being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
 as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
 ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
 of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
 obvious damage caused by this material.
 
 Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
 therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
 nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
 dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
 fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
 the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
 house and manmade objects.
 
 Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
 unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
 desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
 Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
 falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
 elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
 true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
 had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
 likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
 city finally bulldozes the property.  In such a case, the fall and
 damage were never noticed, it is never reported, no material is ever
 recovered, and the meteorite is never officially recognized or named.
 
 Also keep in mind, the criteria for officially approving a meteorite
 as a fall has changed to some degree over the years.  Or could say,
 the criteria was more rigidly enforced in some publications than
 others.  There are several cases of witnessed falls where the witness
 reports are several years or more removed from recovery of specimens
 on the ground.  Some fall dates have uncertain dates or just a date
 range (summer of 18xx, etc).  Some finds could be regarded as falls
 and there is some debate or uncertainty around the circumstances (or
 find location) that resulted in a fall classification being rejected.
 
 So, what I am getting at in a rambling fashion is this - if it is a
 hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
 hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall
 - depending on whether or not the term is being used officially or
 just casually.
 
 Best regards,
 
 MikeG
 
 PS - I think this horse is now officially pulverized beyond
 recognition.  To continue this discussion line any further will
 require someone to acquire a new horse for consideration and possible
 flogging.
 
 -- 
 ---
 Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG
 
 Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
 Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
 RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
 ---
 
 
 On 6/14/12, John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk wrote:
 Any hammer finds recorded? i.e. there's a big stone in the attic and a hole
 
 in the roof, but nobody saw it fall.
 
 John
 
 
 __ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature
 database 7221 (20120614) __
 
 The message was 

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-14 Thread dorifry


- Original Message - 
From: cdtuc...@cox.net
To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com; Regine P. 
fips_br...@yahoo.de; MikeG meteoritem...@gmail.com

Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2012 7:58 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term



Regine, MikeG,
I hate to beat a dead horse but,
There actually could be such a thing as a Hammer Fall.
Take Carancas for example;
This fall was not only observed but, it hit a man made water well and 
killed a couple of animals while excavating a crater.
This fall is generally accepted as a Hammer Fall because we believe it was 
one huge stone that crashed and exploded.

So, then the question is; Is this a hammer stone as well?
Of coarse it is. That is IF it was indeed caused by one single stone that 
exploded on impact. This is a fact that is in dispute amongst Scientists. 
There may have been a swarm of stones that hit at once. We do have 
evidence of this in stones that were found that were nearly fully fusion 
crusted. Had it been just one single stone where did the nearly fully 
crusted stones  come from?
This lends doubt that in fact all of the stones are Hammer Stones. 
However, from a sales standpoint. Having one of these ultra rare fully 
crusted stones would not be such a bad thing to have. I would think they 
would be far more rare and therefore far more valuable to both the 
collector (museum) or Scientist for the simple reason of aesthetics and 
that it does make for  an interesting argument about how many stones did 
fall.
As for the use of the word Michael Blood coined Hammer. He could just of 
easily have used any number of other words to describe this end result. 
Swatter, clapper, striker or anything else one does with an object in his 
had while hitting something.


The other really funny term is the use of the word Fall at all.
I mean try to explain that to a newby? I mean after all, Aren't all 
meteorites Falls in the true sense of the word. How else could they have 
gotten here?
So, the use of this term necessitates an explanation. You have to explain 
that not all meteorites are falls. A newby would look at you like you are 
nuts. The word  fresh fall would make more sense but, most of the time 
the Fresh is left out. Even when a stone is called a fresh Fall 
science can only determine the time it fell within years not hour or 
minutes so even then... If you find a stone. How do you really know when 
it fell. You did find a fall but was it fresh? Or does it just look 
fresh?

Too Funny.


Best,

Carl
meteoritemax


--
Cheers

 Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
Well, I'm referring to an overall suspicious odour when it comes to 
hammer falls on sales pages. It is so imprecise - as many other things 
related to it. What comes to my mind right now is that I downloaded a 
small jpg once from a website on hammers when I started getting 
interested in the historic side of meteorites. I was new to the subject 
and took the picture as a genuine photograph of a man from the New 
Concord area sitting on a dead colt which seemed to be collateral damage. 
I researched my arse off only to find out that the photo is not related 
and the incident most likely never happened. The unreliability of the New 
Concord horse kill has been discussed several times on the list in the 
meantime, yet the picture is still on the website. I hear you say these 
things are completely unrelated, and perhaps they are. And in the end 
this might all be peanuts even. Actually, right now, I ask myself what 
the heck I'm doing here. I actually enjoy doing
 the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But 
why anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to 
cash in is a mystery to me.


Enough said, Best wishes,

Regine




 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

Hi Regine,

I can't argue that point. I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
that will educate the newbies. I think many of us do that. I also
think we could do better if we really tried. But I don't think
everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
trying to mislead people for financial gain. Maybe some dealers do
that. If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop. But
the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
will be replaced by another term that means the same thing.

And we can't excuse people for making rash purchases. The buyer does
bear some responsibility to educate themselves before spending money
on a meteorite (or anything). I guess this gets back to some of the
most fundamental lessons of collecting things. Do one's homework.
Buyer beware. Know your seller. Check references (or feedback). :)

Best

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-14 Thread dorifry

Carl,

I agree, Fall and Find are ridiculous terms. I'm get tired of explaining the 
difference to non-meteorite people. The confusion could be cleared up by 
adding the modifying adjective Observed to the word Fall.
Since all meteorites are both Falls and Finds (to the uninitiated), why not 
just call them Observed Falls and Falls? Makes sense to me!


Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum

(Sorry for the double post, I accidentally hit send)


- Original Message - 
From: cdtuc...@cox.net
To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com; Regine P. 
fips_br...@yahoo.de; MikeG meteoritem...@gmail.com

Sent: Tuesday, June 12, 2012 7:58 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term



Regine, MikeG,
I hate to beat a dead horse but,
There actually could be such a thing as a Hammer Fall.
Take Carancas for example;
This fall was not only observed but, it hit a man made water well and 
killed a couple of animals while excavating a crater.
This fall is generally accepted as a Hammer Fall because we believe it was 
one huge stone that crashed and exploded.

So, then the question is; Is this a hammer stone as well?
Of coarse it is. That is IF it was indeed caused by one single stone that 
exploded on impact. This is a fact that is in dispute amongst Scientists. 
There may have been a swarm of stones that hit at once. We do have 
evidence of this in stones that were found that were nearly fully fusion 
crusted. Had it been just one single stone where did the nearly fully 
crusted stones  come from?
This lends doubt that in fact all of the stones are Hammer Stones. 
However, from a sales standpoint. Having one of these ultra rare fully 
crusted stones would not be such a bad thing to have. I would think they 
would be far more rare and therefore far more valuable to both the 
collector (museum) or Scientist for the simple reason of aesthetics and 
that it does make for  an interesting argument about how many stones did 
fall.
As for the use of the word Michael Blood coined Hammer. He could just of 
easily have used any number of other words to describe this end result. 
Swatter, clapper, striker or anything else one does with an object in his 
had while hitting something.


The other really funny term is the use of the word Fall at all.
I mean try to explain that to a newby? I mean after all, Aren't all 
meteorites Falls in the true sense of the word. How else could they have 
gotten here?
So, the use of this term necessitates an explanation. You have to explain 
that not all meteorites are falls. A newby would look at you like you are 
nuts. The word  fresh fall would make more sense but, most of the time 
the Fresh is left out. Even when a stone is called a fresh Fall 
science can only determine the time it fell within years not hour or 
minutes so even then... If you find a stone. How do you really know when 
it fell. You did find a fall but was it fresh? Or does it just look 
fresh?

Too Funny.


Best,

Carl
meteoritemax


--
Cheers

 Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
Well, I'm referring to an overall suspicious odour when it comes to 
hammer falls on sales pages. It is so imprecise - as many other things 
related to it. What comes to my mind right now is that I downloaded a 
small jpg once from a website on hammers when I started getting 
interested in the historic side of meteorites. I was new to the subject 
and took the picture as a genuine photograph of a man from the New 
Concord area sitting on a dead colt which seemed to be collateral damage. 
I researched my arse off only to find out that the photo is not related 
and the incident most likely never happened. The unreliability of the New 
Concord horse kill has been discussed several times on the list in the 
meantime, yet the picture is still on the website. I hear you say these 
things are completely unrelated, and perhaps they are. And in the end 
this might all be peanuts even. Actually, right now, I ask myself what 
the heck I'm doing here. I actually enjoy doing
 the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But 
why anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to 
cash in is a mystery to me.


Enough said, Best wishes,

Regine




 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

Hi Regine,

I can't argue that point. I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
that will educate the newbies. I think many of us do that. I also
think we could do better if we really tried. But I don't think
everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
trying to mislead people for financial gain. Maybe some dealers do
that. If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop. But
the term hammer

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-14 Thread John Hendry
Any hammer finds recorded? i.e. there's a big stone in the attic and a hole 
in the roof, but nobody saw it fall.


John


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The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi John and List,

Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
hammer or a fall.

Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
obvious damage caused by this material.

Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
house and manmade objects.

Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
city finally bulldozes the property.  In such a case, the fall and
damage were never noticed, it is never reported, no material is ever
recovered, and the meteorite is never officially recognized or named.

Also keep in mind, the criteria for officially approving a meteorite
as a fall has changed to some degree over the years.  Or could say,
the criteria was more rigidly enforced in some publications than
others.  There are several cases of witnessed falls where the witness
reports are several years or more removed from recovery of specimens
on the ground.  Some fall dates have uncertain dates or just a date
range (summer of 18xx, etc).  Some finds could be regarded as falls
and there is some debate or uncertainty around the circumstances (or
find location) that resulted in a fall classification being rejected.

So, what I am getting at in a rambling fashion is this - if it is a
hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall
- depending on whether or not the term is being used officially or
just casually.

Best regards,

MikeG

PS - I think this horse is now officially pulverized beyond
recognition.  To continue this discussion line any further will
require someone to acquire a new horse for consideration and possible
flogging.

-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---


On 6/14/12, John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk wrote:
 Any hammer finds recorded? i.e. there's a big stone in the attic and a hole

 in the roof, but nobody saw it fall.

 John


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 database 7221 (20120614) __

 The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

 http://www.eset.com



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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread John Hendry

Michael,

great expositon, and a good example of what I was thinking about. However I
am still failing to parse the language used to square with what would be the
normally understood meaning in the english language. If I may quote your
analysis here and there.


Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.

Got it.


 In this particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
being done.

Understood.


if it is a
hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall


Having cognitive issues at this juncture. If it isn't witnessed, but it is
considered a 'hammer fall', then how can 'hammer falls', in their entirity,
be a subset of witnessed or observed falls. Surely the definition of fall
must therefore include unobserved meteorite arrivals (i.e. unobserved hammer
falls).You cannot have a witnessed unwitnessed event. Well not in my book
anyway. Then again I am not Orwell.

Personally, I think it's bad nomenclature, but I can easily imagine how this
sort of stuff arises. A few weeks ago after reading some of the many Sutters
Mill accounts from the field I went for an idle stroll along a deserted
track in rural Ukraine. I noticed in the distance some semilustrous
subspherical objects, and for a while on my approach my imagination was
giving rise to mild tachycardia. On intimate inspection I found some nicely
dimpled droppings from a deer or something. After recovery from this
crushing disappointment, I thought it would be appropriate to propose a new
subclass of Leaverite called 'Meteorshite'. However thinking on this now,
all meteorshites would not necessarily be leaverites. A bedouin coming
across the wrong sort of Camel Donga (ok mixing continents here but give me
some latitude please), might not be thinking leaverite, he might be thinking
campfire for barbeque.

Regards,
John





- Original Message - 
From: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com

To: John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk
Cc: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 10:09 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)



Hi John and List,

Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
hammer or a fall.

Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
obvious damage caused by this material.

Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
house and manmade objects.

Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
city finally bulldozes the property.  In such a case, the fall and
damage were never noticed, it is never reported, no material is ever
recovered, and the meteorite is never officially recognized or named.

Also keep in mind, the criteria for officially approving a meteorite
as a fall has changed to some degree over the years.  Or could say,
the criteria was more rigidly enforced in some publications than
others.  There are several cases of witnessed falls where the witness
reports are several years or more removed from recovery of specimens
on the ground.  Some fall dates have uncertain dates or just a date
range (summer of 18xx, etc).  Some finds could be regarded as falls

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread Ed Deckert
Mercy!  We can't even shoot this poor horse to put it out of its misery 
'cause it wouldn't do any good - dead is dead!.  'Bout all that'd do is 
scare off some of the flies covering its carcass for a few moments.


Ed  ;-)

- Original Message - 
From: John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk

To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 4:44 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)



Michael,

great expositon, and a good example of what I was thinking about. However 
I
am still failing to parse the language used to square with what would be 
the

normally understood meaning in the english language. If I may quote your
analysis here and there.


Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.

Got it.

 In this particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the 
damage

being done.

Understood.


if it is a
hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall


Having cognitive issues at this juncture. If it isn't witnessed, but it is
considered a 'hammer fall', then how can 'hammer falls', in their 
entirity,

be a subset of witnessed or observed falls. Surely the definition of fall
must therefore include unobserved meteorite arrivals (i.e. unobserved 
hammer

falls).You cannot have a witnessed unwitnessed event. Well not in my book
anyway. Then again I am not Orwell.

Personally, I think it's bad nomenclature, but I can easily imagine how 
this
sort of stuff arises. A few weeks ago after reading some of the many 
Sutters

Mill accounts from the field I went for an idle stroll along a deserted
track in rural Ukraine. I noticed in the distance some semilustrous
subspherical objects, and for a while on my approach my imagination was
giving rise to mild tachycardia. On intimate inspection I found some 
nicely

dimpled droppings from a deer or something. After recovery from this
crushing disappointment, I thought it would be appropriate to propose a 
new

subclass of Leaverite called 'Meteorshite'. However thinking on this now,
all meteorshites would not necessarily be leaverites. A bedouin coming
across the wrong sort of Camel Donga (ok mixing continents here but give 
me
some latitude please), might not be thinking leaverite, he might be 
thinking

campfire for barbeque.

Regards,
John





- Original Message - 
From: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com

To: John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk
Cc: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 10:09 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)



Hi John and List,

Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
hammer or a fall.

Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
obvious damage caused by this material.

Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
house and manmade objects.

Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
city finally bulldozes the property.  In such a case, the fall and
damage were never noticed, it is never reported, no material is ever
recovered, and the meteorite is never officially recognized or named.

Also

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi John, Ed, and List,

We are close to agreement.  I always defer to the Met Bulletin when
calling any meteorite a fall or hammer fall.  Despite everything I
said about New Orleans, it is listed in the official Met Bulletin as a
fall.  So I feel comfortable adding hammer fall to it.

I guess a hammer find would be more rare in some ways.  ;)

Best regards,

MikeG
-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---

On 6/14/12, John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk wrote:
 Michael,

 great expositon, and a good example of what I was thinking about. However I

 am still failing to parse the language used to square with what would be the

 normally understood meaning in the english language. If I may quote your
 analysis here and there.

 Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
 unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.
 Got it.

  In this particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the
 damage
 being done.
 Understood.

 if it is a
 hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
 hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall

 Having cognitive issues at this juncture. If it isn't witnessed, but it is
 considered a 'hammer fall', then how can 'hammer falls', in their entirity,

 be a subset of witnessed or observed falls. Surely the definition of fall
 must therefore include unobserved meteorite arrivals (i.e. unobserved hammer

 falls).You cannot have a witnessed unwitnessed event. Well not in my book
 anyway. Then again I am not Orwell.

 Personally, I think it's bad nomenclature, but I can easily imagine how this

 sort of stuff arises. A few weeks ago after reading some of the many Sutters

 Mill accounts from the field I went for an idle stroll along a deserted
 track in rural Ukraine. I noticed in the distance some semilustrous
 subspherical objects, and for a while on my approach my imagination was
 giving rise to mild tachycardia. On intimate inspection I found some nicely

 dimpled droppings from a deer or something. After recovery from this
 crushing disappointment, I thought it would be appropriate to propose a new

 subclass of Leaverite called 'Meteorshite'. However thinking on this now,
 all meteorshites would not necessarily be leaverites. A bedouin coming
 across the wrong sort of Camel Donga (ok mixing continents here but give me

 some latitude please), might not be thinking leaverite, he might be thinking

 campfire for barbeque.

 Regards,
 John





 - Original Message -
 From: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 To: John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk
 Cc: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Sent: Thursday, June 14, 2012 10:09 PM
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)


 Hi John and List,

 Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
 Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

 All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
 to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
 hammer or a fall.

 Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
 unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
 meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
 destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
 and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
 particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
 being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
 as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
 ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
 of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
 obvious damage caused by this material.

 Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
 therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
 nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
 dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
 fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
 the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
 house and manmade objects.

 Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
 unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
 desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
 Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
 falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
 elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
 true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
 had

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread Frank Cressy


Mike and all,

Just thought I'd muddy the waters ;-)

Walnut Hill, Maine is listed as a find but is also a hammer stone as it was 
found during the repair of a chicken brooding house.  Don't you just love those 
exceptions to the rule!

Cheers,

Frank





From: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
To: John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk
Cc: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thu, June 14, 2012 12:10:05 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

Hi John and List,

Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
hammer or a fall.

Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
obvious damage caused by this material.

Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
house and manmade objects.

Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
city finally bulldozes the property.  In such a case, the fall and
damage were never noticed, it is never reported, no material is ever
recovered, and the meteorite is never officially recognized or named.

Also keep in mind, the criteria for officially approving a meteorite
as a fall has changed to some degree over the years.  Or could say,
the criteria was more rigidly enforced in some publications than
others.  There are several cases of witnessed falls where the witness
reports are several years or more removed from recovery of specimens
on the ground.  Some fall dates have uncertain dates or just a date
range (summer of 18xx, etc).  Some finds could be regarded as falls
and there is some debate or uncertainty around the circumstances (or
find location) that resulted in a fall classification being rejected.

So, what I am getting at in a rambling fashion is this - if it is a
hammer in the true and accepted sense, then it could be called a
hammer fall or witnessed fall or observed fall or just a fall
- depending on whether or not the term is being used officially or
just casually.

Best regards,

MikeG

PS - I think this horse is now officially pulverized beyond
recognition.  To continue this discussion line any further will
require someone to acquire a new horse for consideration and possible
flogging.

-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---


On 6/14/12, John Hendry p...@pict.co.uk wrote:
 Any hammer finds recorded? i.e. there's a big stone in the attic and a hole

 in the roof, but nobody saw it fall.

 John


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (this poor poor horse)

2012-06-14 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi Mike,

Welcome back from the new fall.  Grab a cudgel and get a few licks in
on this pile of sad horse flesh...

Mike said - How do you come up with this? I was at the New Orleans
house 40 hours after
 t fell. While it was not seen to hit the house, the homeowner had gone to
 work at 7 am and returned home at 5 pm finding his house full of rocks and
 destruction.

Isn't that what I said? .

Other Mike said - When the New Orleans
meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later. 


Mike said -  The neighbors reported huge crashing noise like a car accident
 at ~4  pm I think, and several airline pilots reported a fireball.

I did not recall this information.  Thanks for clarifying that.


Mike said -  I am pretty sure that the fact that the meteorite went
through 3 floors that
 day
 That the noncom had enough evidence to know that the New Orleans meteorite
 fell on that date between the hours of 7 am and 5 pm.

Isn't that what I said?

Other Mike said - The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
 of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
 obvious damage caused by this material.


Thanks for paraphrasing what I said and correcting me on the
independent witness info.

 How can you guys take the simplest thing like fall and find and yap about it
 for days?

It's called beating a dead horse.  It starts out as swatting the
flies, but escalates from there.

Best regards,

MikeG
-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---




On 6/14/12, Michael Farmer m...@meteoriteguy.com wrote:
 How do you come up with this? I was at the New Orleans house 40 hours after
 t fell. While it was not seen to hit the house, the homeowner had gone to
 work at 7 am and returned home at 5 pm finding his house full of rocks and
 destruction. The neighbors reported huge crashing noise like a car accident
 at ~4  pm I think, and several airline pilots reported a fireball.
 I am pretty sure that the fact that the meteorite went through 3 floors that
 day
 That the noncom had enough evidence to know that the New Orleans meteorite
 fell on that date between the hours of 7 am and 5 pm.

 How can you guys take the simplest thing like fall and find and yap about it
 for days?

 Perhaps some people need to try knitting for a hobby, seems less
 controversial.
 Michael Farmer

 Sent from my iPhone

 On Jun 14, 2012, at 9:09 PM, Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 wrote:

 Hi John and List,

 Good question.  Let me attempt to answer.  If I fail, perhaps Capt.
 Blood will chime in or another hammerhead will jump to the rescue.

 All hammers are falls, because if a hammer falls and nobody is around
 to notice it, it will never be discoveredand is therefore not a
 hammer or a fall.

 Let me put it this way - New Orleans is a recent example of an
 unwitnessed hammer that is considered a fall.  When the New Orleans
 meteorite fell, penetrated the house and left a path of minor
 destruction (writing desk, etc), nobody was home.  The owners were out
 and did not come home to find the cosmic damage until later.  In this
 particular case, nobody directly witnessed the fall or the damage
 being done.  If I recall correctly, there were no indirect witnesses
 as well - no radar track, no fireball video, no other witnesses on the
 ground.  The find was determined to be a fall based on - the freshness
 of the material found, the testimony of the homeowners, and the
 obvious damage caused by this material.

 Met Bull states that the New Orleans meteorite is a fall, so it is
 therefore a observed fall or witnessed fall in officially-approved
 nomenclature and accepted use amongst the majority of collectors and
 dealers.  Additionally, some hammerheads may refer to it as a hammer
 fall.  Also of note, New Orleans is a single stone fall, therefore
 the New Orleans meteorite is a hammer stone because it struck a
 house and manmade objects.

 Under different circumstances, the New Orleans meteorite may have gone
 unnoticed and unreported.  The lower 9th Ward of New Orleans is
 desolate today, as a result of lingering damage from hurricane
 Katrina.  Large stretches of homes and businesses are vacant and
 falling into disrepair.  There are squatters, homeless persons, gang
 elements, and other transients that reside in the area.  The same is
 true for other areas of New Orleans to varying degrees.  If the stone
 had fallen in one of these houses, with no first-hand witnesses, it is
 likely to lay undiscovered and be carted off to the landfill when the
 city finally bulldozes the property. 

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-13 Thread Michael Farmer
Regine, 
I completely agree with you,
My two cents: hammer stone is of interest to me and to many collectors I know. 
I have several house hitting meteorites in my collection from Cali, Thika, 
Guadalajara, etc with the rooftops they hit. But that goes with a particular 
stone. One Thika which landed in a coffee field does not in my opinion equal 
the Thika which went through a house rooftop and has the roof with it. To many 
collectors the roof piece well documented, has special value. To others perhaps 
not, but to each his own. However someone trying to add extra value to all 
Thika stones because one went through a house is his marketing and borders on a 
scam in my opinion.Of course in the case of Park Forest, so many stones hitting 
houses and buildings, cars
Err made the headlines, but again, the specialness should be assigned to each 
stone not the hundred others that just landed on the ground
To suggest every stone from Sutter's Mill is special because one hit a garage 
door is ludicrous. However that stone stands out among 60+ and many people are 
willing to pay to have a piece, or we would not have sold out in a couple of 
days.

Michael Farmer


Sent from my iPhone

On Jun 12, 2012, at 10:08 AM, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:

 Sorry to come up with the subject 
 matter again, but I keep thinking about this every now and then and 
 would like to add my two cents on it this time.
 
 I agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far haven't met 
 anyone who is very fond of it 
 except those who actually see it as a market opportunity. On the flip 
 side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The 
 Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay 
 auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit 
 Mrs. Hodges (it was instead part of the one found by Julius McKinney, 
 which has an interesting story by itself and, as far as I'm concerned, 
 deserves more attention than a footnote).
 
 I'm quite keen on the stories 
 behind hammer stones and the idea that something ancient from out there 
 is hitting something random and creates a connection between the sublime and 
 the mundane. Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which 
 does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely overshadows 
 all the other aspects (historical or other) of a meteorite 
 shower. I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term L'Aigle 
 hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on the 
 arm. A more recent example is Sutter's Mill - is it an important fall 
 because one of the rocks struck a garage door? I feel these falls 
 deserve different attributes in their headline, something which is 
 perhaps attributable to all or most of the specimens of the fall, such 
 as the historic significance, the classification, characteristics or man 
 hours included in searching for the pieces in the strewn field. As 
 mentioned before, I'm not referring to the actual stone which hit 
 something, as the 
 designation is significant in identifying the rock as being the single 
 piece falling on something man made.
 
 Cheers,
 Regine
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-13 Thread cdtucson
Regine, MikeG,
I hate to beat a dead horse but, 
There actually could be such a thing as a Hammer Fall.
Take Carancas for example;
This fall was not only observed but, it hit a man made water well and killed a 
couple of animals while excavating a crater.
This fall is generally accepted as a Hammer Fall because we believe it was one 
huge stone that crashed and exploded.
So, then the question is; Is this a hammer stone as well? 
Of coarse it is. That is IF it was indeed caused by one single stone that 
exploded on impact. This is a fact that is in dispute amongst Scientists. There 
may have been a swarm of stones that hit at once. We do have evidence of this 
in stones that were found that were nearly fully fusion crusted. Had it been 
just one single stone where did the nearly fully crusted stones  come from? 
This lends doubt that in fact all of the stones are Hammer Stones. However, 
from a sales standpoint. Having one of these ultra rare fully crusted stones 
would not be such a bad thing to have. I would think they would be far more 
rare and therefore far more valuable to both the collector (museum) or 
Scientist for the simple reason of aesthetics and that it does make for  an 
interesting argument about how many stones did fall. 
As for the use of the word Michael Blood coined Hammer. He could just of 
easily have used any number of other words to describe this end result. 
Swatter, clapper, striker or anything else one does with an object in his had 
while hitting something. 

The other really funny term is the use of the word Fall at all.
I mean try to explain that to a newby? I mean after all, Aren't all meteorites 
Falls in the true sense of the word. How else could they have gotten here? 
So, the use of this term necessitates an explanation. You have to explain that 
not all meteorites are falls. A newby would look at you like you are nuts. The 
word  fresh fall would make more sense but, most of the time the Fresh is 
left out. Even when a stone is called a fresh Fall science can only determine 
the time it fell within years not hour or minutes so even then... If you find 
a stone. How do you really know when it fell. You did find a fall but was 
it fresh? Or does it just look fresh? 
Too Funny.


Best,

Carl
meteoritemax


--
Cheers

 Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote: 
 Well, I'm referring to an overall suspicious odour when it comes to hammer 
 falls on sales pages. It is so imprecise - as many other things related to 
 it. What comes to my mind right now is that I downloaded a small jpg once 
 from a website on hammers when I started getting interested in the historic 
 side of meteorites. I was new to the subject and took the picture as a 
 genuine photograph of a man from the New Concord area sitting on a dead colt 
 which seemed to be collateral damage. I researched my arse off only to find 
 out that the photo is not related and the incident most likely never 
 happened. The unreliability of the New Concord horse kill has been discussed 
 several times on the list in the meantime, yet the picture is still on the 
 website. I hear you say these things are completely unrelated, and perhaps 
 they are. And in the end this might all be peanuts even. Actually, right now, 
 I ask myself what the heck I'm doing here. I actually enjoy doing
  the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But why 
 anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to cash in 
 is a mystery to me.
 
 Enough said, Best wishes, 
 
 Regine
 
 
 
 
  Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de 
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com 
 Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
  
 Hi Regine,
 
 I can't argue that point.  I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
 should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
 that will educate the newbies.  I think many of us do that.  I also
 think we could do better if we really tried.  But I don't think
 everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
 trying to mislead people for financial gain.  Maybe some dealers do
 that.  If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop.  But
 the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
 will be replaced by another term that means the same thing.
 
 And we can't excuse people for making rash purchases.  The buyer does
 bear some responsibility to educate themselves before spending money
 on a meteorite (or anything).  I guess this gets back to some of the
 most fundamental lessons of collecting things.  Do one's homework.
 Buyer beware.  Know your seller.  Check references (or feedback).   :)
 
 Best regards,
 
 MikeG
 
 -- 
 ---
 Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG
 
 Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-13 Thread MstrEman
Sales of hour carbonaceous chondrite encrusted dead horse floggers are
hereby held until we can modify our hoc-stock with hammer stone
harvested, hand-wrapped hammer handles hurriedly hacked from houses
hammered  by hammer fall hunks.  Hammer fall stones, country mail
boxes, Malibus, sun shades or drywall crumbs may have had
substitutions at our sole discretion.

Caution: hammer stones may help cause horrendous headaches, heartburn
and hotflashes and should be havoided.  hAd Hauseum  er ad nauseum. hI
hapologize.

hElton

On 6/12/12, cdtuc...@cox.net cdtuc...@cox.net wrote:
 Regine, MikeG,
 I hate to beat a dead horse but,
 There actually could be such a thing as a Hammer Fall.
 Take Carancas for example;
 This fall was not only observed but, it hit a man made water well and killed
 a couple of animals while excavating a crater.
 This fall is generally accepted as a Hammer Fall because we believe it was
 one huge stone that crashed and exploded.
 So, then the question is; Is this a hammer stone as well?
 Of coarse it is. That is IF it was indeed caused by one single stone that
 exploded on impact. This is a fact that is in dispute amongst Scientists.
 There may have been a swarm of stones that hit at once. We do have evidence
 of this in stones that were found that were nearly fully fusion crusted. Had
 it been just one single stone where did the nearly fully crusted stones
 come from?
 This lends doubt that in fact all of the stones are Hammer Stones.
 However, from a sales standpoint. Having one of these ultra rare fully
 crusted stones would not be such a bad thing to have. I would think they
 would be far more rare and therefore far more valuable to both the collector
 (museum) or Scientist for the simple reason of aesthetics and that it does
 make for  an interesting argument about how many stones did fall.
 As for the use of the word Michael Blood coined Hammer. He could just of
 easily have used any number of other words to describe this end result.
 Swatter, clapper, striker or anything else one does with an object in his
 had while hitting something.

 The other really funny term is the use of the word Fall at all.
 I mean try to explain that to a newby? I mean after all, Aren't all
 meteorites Falls in the true sense of the word. How else could they have
 gotten here?
 So, the use of this term necessitates an explanation. You have to explain
 that not all meteorites are falls. A newby would look at you like you are
 nuts. The word  fresh fall would make more sense but, most of the time the
 Fresh is left out. Even when a stone is called a fresh Fall science can
 only determine the time it fell within years not hour or minutes so even
 then... If you find a stone. How do you really know when it fell. You
 did find a fall but was it fresh? Or does it just look fresh?
 Too Funny.


 Best,

 Carl
 meteoritemax


 --
 Cheers

  Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
 Well, I'm referring to an overall suspicious odour when it comes to
 hammer falls on sales pages. It is so imprecise - as many other things
 related to it. What comes to my mind right now is that I downloaded a
 small jpg once from a website on hammers when I started getting interested
 in the historic side of meteorites. I was new to the subject and took the
 picture as a genuine photograph of a man from the New Concord area sitting
 on a dead colt which seemed to be collateral damage. I researched my arse
 off only to find out that the photo is not related and the incident most
 likely never happened. The unreliability of the New Concord horse kill has
 been discussed several times on the list in the meantime, yet the picture
 is still on the website. I hear you say these things are completely
 unrelated, and perhaps they are. And in the end this might all be peanuts
 even. Actually, right now, I ask myself what the heck I'm doing here. I
 actually enjoy doing
  the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But
 why anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to
 cash in is a mystery to me.

 Enough said, Best wishes,

 Regine



 
  Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
 
 Hi Regine,
 
 I can't argue that point.  I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
 should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
 that will educate the newbies.  I think many of us do that.  I also
 think we could do better if we really tried.  But I don't think
 everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
 trying to mislead people for financial gain.  Maybe some dealers do
 that.  If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop.  But
 the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
 will be replaced by another term that means

[meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-12 Thread Regine P.
Sorry to come up with the subject 
matter again, but I keep thinking about this every now and then and 
would like to add my two cents on it this time.

I agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far haven't met 
anyone who is very fond of it 
except those who actually see it as a market opportunity. On the flip 
side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The 
Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay 
auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit 
Mrs. Hodges (it was instead part of the one found by Julius McKinney, 
which has an interesting story by itself and, as far as I'm concerned, 
deserves more attention than a footnote).

I'm quite keen on the stories 
behind hammer stones and the idea that something ancient from out there 
is hitting something random and creates a connection between the sublime and 
the mundane. Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which does 
the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely overshadows all 
the other aspects (historical or other) of a meteorite 
shower. I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term L'Aigle 
hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on the 
arm. A more recent example is Sutter's Mill - is it an important fall 
because one of the rocks struck a garage door? I feel these falls 
deserve different attributes in their headline, something which is 
perhaps attributable to all or most of the specimens of the fall, such 
as the historic significance, the classification, characteristics or man hours 
included in searching for the pieces in the strewn field. As 
mentioned before, I'm not referring to the actual stone which hit 
something, as the 
designation is significant in identifying the rock as being the single 
piece falling on something man made.

Cheers,
Regine
__

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Meteorite-list mailing list
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-12 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi Regine,

I agree in principle with what you are saying here, I really do.  No
meteorite fall should ever be pigeon-holed or categorized solely
because a stone struck something, and therefore that stone has a
higher financial value.  That completely defeats the purpose of
collecting meteorites.

Let me clarify a few of the points you raised :

 agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far haven't met
 anyone who is very fond of it
 except those who actually see it as a market opportunity.

I know of several collectors who use it, and they are not dealers and
have no financial interest in using the term hammer fall.  Before I
became a dealer, I was using it to describe my personal specimens.  I
still use it because of what it means to me, and some other
collectors, not because it is marketing.  Maybe others use it for
marketing purposes - I would not argue against that.

On the flip
 side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
 Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
 auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit
 Mrs. Hodges 

I would expect our dear police chief to be confused - he is not a
meteorite collector, he is a policeman.  Police officers use lots of
terminology that is confusing to people who are not a part of the
law-enforcement community.  Criminals are often referred to as
actors - that is confusing to me.  Is a man a bank robber, or is he
pretending to be one?

 Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
 does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely
 overshadows all the other aspects (historical or other) of a meteorite
 shower.

I suppose it could, for some people.  I don't see it that way.

 I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term L'Aigle
 hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on the
 arm. 

I agree 100%.  In my mind, L'Aigle is a historical fall if one must
label it.  L'Aigle will always have supreme importance that goes far
beyond anything (or person) that may have been struck by a stone.  Of
course, it's still a hammer fall to some collectors, but I think
most hammer-heads would agree that L'Aigle is a fall of great
historical importance first, and a hammer fall in the least.

 A more recent example is Sutter's Mill - is it an important fall
 because one of the rocks struck a garage door? 

Indeed not.  Sutter's Mill is not defined as a hammer, and never
should be.  But, to some collectors, the stone that struck Officer
Matin's garage has additional value because it did strike a mandmade
construct.  Of course, this additional value is entirely secondary to
the real value of the fall, which is scientific first, cultural
second, and hammer a distant third (if at all).

I agree completely with your sentiment here.  But to say that a
segment of the collector community is engaging solely in shameless and
misleading marketing because we choose to use a certain term to
describe a fall is not true.  We can strike the term hammer fall
from human memory forever, and that does not change the fact that a
Sutter's Mill stone struck a garage, or a Park Forest stone penetrated
a house.  Somebody will come along and create another term to
delineate such falls from a fall like Tamdakt that fell in a remote
area.  That new term may or may not sound like hammer fall, but the
meaning will be the same.  And people would then argue over the
semantics of it.

Best regards,

MikeG
-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---



On 6/12/12, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
 Sorry to come up with the subject
 matter again, but I keep thinking about this every now and then and
 would like to add my two cents on it this time.

 I agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far haven't met
 anyone who is very fond of it
 except those who actually see it as a market opportunity. On the flip
 side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
 Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
 auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit
 Mrs. Hodges (it was instead part of the one found by Julius McKinney,
 which has an interesting story by itself and, as far as I'm concerned,
 deserves more attention than a footnote).

 I'm quite keen on the stories
 behind hammer stones and the idea that something ancient from out there
 is hitting something random and creates a connection between the sublime and
 the mundane. Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
 does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely
 overshadows all the other aspects (historical or other) of a 

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-12 Thread Regine P.
But what if said police chief won the lottery and would like to purchase the 
crumbs because the thing fell in his town?
Of course the term is not that confusing to meteorite buffs, but to new 
collectors or people who just want to own the one rock from space.

Cheers, Regine



- Ursprüngliche Message -
 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Gesendet: 19:27 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
 
 Hi Regine,
 
 I agree in principle with what you are saying here, I really do.  No
 meteorite fall should ever be pigeon-holed or categorized solely
 because a stone struck something, and therefore that stone has a
 higher financial value.  That completely defeats the purpose of
 collecting meteorites.
 
 Let me clarify a few of the points you raised :
 
  agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far 
 haven't met
  anyone who is very fond of it
  except those who actually see it as a market opportunity.
 
 I know of several collectors who use it, and they are not dealers and
 have no financial interest in using the term hammer fall.  Before I
 became a dealer, I was using it to describe my personal specimens.  I
 still use it because of what it means to me, and some other
 collectors, not because it is marketing.  Maybe others use it for
 marketing purposes - I would not argue against that.
 
 On the flip
  side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
  Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
  auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit
  Mrs. Hodges 
 
 I would expect our dear police chief to be confused - he is not a
 meteorite collector, he is a policeman.  Police officers use lots of
 terminology that is confusing to people who are not a part of the
 law-enforcement community.  Criminals are often referred to as
 actors - that is confusing to me.  Is a man a bank robber, or is he
 pretending to be one?
 
  Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
  does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely
  overshadows all the other aspects (historical or other) of a meteorite
  shower.
 
 I suppose it could, for some people.  I don't see it that way.
 
  I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term 
 L'Aigle
  hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on the
  arm. 
 
 I agree 100%.  In my mind, L'Aigle is a historical fall if one 
 must
 label it.  L'Aigle will always have supreme importance that goes far
 beyond anything (or person) that may have been struck by a stone.  Of
 course, it's still a hammer fall to some collectors, but I think
 most hammer-heads would agree that L'Aigle is a fall of great
 historical importance first, and a hammer fall in the least.
 
  A more recent example is Sutter's Mill - is it an important fall
  because one of the rocks struck a garage door? 
 
 Indeed not.  Sutter's Mill is not defined as a hammer, and never
 should be.  But, to some collectors, the stone that struck Officer
 Matin's garage has additional value because it did strike a mandmade
 construct.  Of course, this additional value is entirely secondary to
 the real value of the fall, which is scientific first, cultural
 second, and hammer a distant third (if at all).
 
 I agree completely with your sentiment here.  But to say that a
 segment of the collector community is engaging solely in shameless and
 misleading marketing because we choose to use a certain term to
 describe a fall is not true.  We can strike the term hammer fall
 from human memory forever, and that does not change the fact that a
 Sutter's Mill stone struck a garage, or a Park Forest stone penetrated
 a house.  Somebody will come along and create another term to
 delineate such falls from a fall like Tamdakt that fell in a remote
 area.  That new term may or may not sound like hammer fall, but the
 meaning will be the same.  And people would then argue over the
 semantics of it.
 
 Best regards,
 
 MikeG
 -- 
 ---
 Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG
 
 Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
 Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
 RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
 ---
 
 
 
 On 6/12/12, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
  Sorry to come up with the subject
  matter again, but I keep thinking about this every now and then and
  would like to add my two cents on it this time.
 
  I agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far 
 haven't met
  anyone who is very fond of it
  except those who actually see it as a market opportunity. On the flip
  side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
  Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-12 Thread Michael Gilmer
Hi Regine,

I can't argue that point.  I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
that will educate the newbies.  I think many of us do that.  I also
think we could do better if we really tried.  But I don't think
everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
trying to mislead people for financial gain.  Maybe some dealers do
that.  If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop.  But
the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
will be replaced by another term that means the same thing.

And we can't excuse people for making rash purchases.  The buyer does
bear some responsibility to educate themselves before spending money
on a meteorite (or anything).  I guess this gets back to some of the
most fundamental lessons of collecting things.  Do one's homework.
Buyer beware.  Know your seller.  Check references (or feedback).   :)

Best regards,

MikeG

-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---


On 6/12/12, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
 But what if said police chief won the lottery and would like to purchase the
 crumbs because the thing fell in his town?
 Of course the term is not that confusing to meteorite buffs, but to new
 collectors or people who just want to own the one rock from space.

 Cheers, Regine



 - Ursprüngliche Message -
 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Gesendet: 19:27 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

 Hi Regine,

 I agree in principle with what you are saying here, I really do.  No
 meteorite fall should ever be pigeon-holed or categorized solely
 because a stone struck something, and therefore that stone has a
 higher financial value.  That completely defeats the purpose of
 collecting meteorites.

 Let me clarify a few of the points you raised :

  agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far
 haven't met
  anyone who is very fond of it
  except those who actually see it as a market opportunity.

 I know of several collectors who use it, and they are not dealers and
 have no financial interest in using the term hammer fall.  Before I
 became a dealer, I was using it to describe my personal specimens.  I
 still use it because of what it means to me, and some other
 collectors, not because it is marketing.  Maybe others use it for
 marketing purposes - I would not argue against that.

 On the flip
  side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
  Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
  auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit
  Mrs. Hodges 

 I would expect our dear police chief to be confused - he is not a
 meteorite collector, he is a policeman.  Police officers use lots of
 terminology that is confusing to people who are not a part of the
 law-enforcement community.  Criminals are often referred to as
 actors - that is confusing to me.  Is a man a bank robber, or is he
 pretending to be one?

  Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
  does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely
  overshadows all the other aspects (historical or other) of a meteorite
  shower.

 I suppose it could, for some people.  I don't see it that way.

  I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term
 L'Aigle
  hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on the
  arm. 

 I agree 100%.  In my mind, L'Aigle is a historical fall if one
 must
 label it.  L'Aigle will always have supreme importance that goes far
 beyond anything (or person) that may have been struck by a stone.  Of
 course, it's still a hammer fall to some collectors, but I think
 most hammer-heads would agree that L'Aigle is a fall of great
 historical importance first, and a hammer fall in the least.

  A more recent example is Sutter's Mill - is it an important fall
  because one of the rocks struck a garage door? 

 Indeed not.  Sutter's Mill is not defined as a hammer, and never
 should be.  But, to some collectors, the stone that struck Officer
 Matin's garage has additional value because it did strike a mandmade
 construct.  Of course, this additional value is entirely secondary to
 the real value of the fall, which is scientific first, cultural
 second, and hammer a distant third (if at all).

 I agree completely with your sentiment here.  But to say that a
 segment of the collector community is engaging solely in shameless and
 misleading marketing because we choose to use a certain term to
 describe a fall is not true

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

2012-06-12 Thread Regine P.
Well, I'm referring to an overall suspicious odour when it comes to hammer 
falls on sales pages. It is so imprecise - as many other things related to it. 
What comes to my mind right now is that I downloaded a small jpg once from a 
website on hammers when I started getting interested in the historic side of 
meteorites. I was new to the subject and took the picture as a genuine 
photograph of a man from the New Concord area sitting on a dead colt which 
seemed to be collateral damage. I researched my arse off only to find out that 
the photo is not related and the incident most likely never happened. The 
unreliability of the New Concord horse kill has been discussed several times on 
the list in the meantime, yet the picture is still on the website. I hear you 
say these things are completely unrelated, and perhaps they are. And in the end 
this might all be peanuts even. Actually, right now, I ask myself what the heck 
I'm doing here. I actually enjoy doing
 the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But why 
anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to cash in is 
a mystery to me.

Enough said, Best wishes, 

Regine




 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de 
CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com 
Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
 
Hi Regine,

I can't argue that point.  I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
that will educate the newbies.  I think many of us do that.  I also
think we could do better if we really tried.  But I don't think
everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
trying to mislead people for financial gain.  Maybe some dealers do
that.  If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop.  But
the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
will be replaced by another term that means the same thing.

And we can't excuse people for making rash purchases.  The buyer does
bear some responsibility to educate themselves before spending money
on a meteorite (or anything).  I guess this gets back to some of the
most fundamental lessons of collecting things.  Do one's homework.
Buyer beware.  Know your seller.  Check references (or feedback).   :)

Best regards,

MikeG

-- 
---
Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG

Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
---


On 6/12/12, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
 But what if said police chief won the lottery and would like to purchase the
 crumbs because the thing fell in his town?
 Of course the term is not that confusing to meteorite buffs, but to new
 collectors or people who just want to own the one rock from space.

 Cheers, Regine



 - Ursprüngliche Message -
 Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Gesendet: 19:27 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term

 Hi Regine,

 I agree in principle with what you are saying here, I really do.  No
 meteorite fall should ever be pigeon-holed or categorized solely
 because a stone struck something, and therefore that stone has a
 higher financial value.  That completely defeats the purpose of
 collecting meteorites.

 Let me clarify a few of the points you raised :

  agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far
 haven't met
  anyone who is very fond of it
  except those who actually see it as a market opportunity.

 I know of several collectors who use it, and they are not dealers and
 have no financial interest in using the term hammer fall.  Before I
 became a dealer, I was using it to describe my personal specimens.  I
 still use it because of what it means to me, and some other
 collectors, not because it is marketing.  Maybe others use it for
 marketing purposes - I would not argue against that.

 On the flip
  side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
  Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
  auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which hit
  Mrs. Hodges 

 I would expect our dear police chief to be confused - he is not a
 meteorite collector, he is a policeman.  Police officers use lots of
 terminology that is confusing to people who are not a part of the
 law-enforcement community.  Criminals are often referred to as
 actors - that is confusing to me.  Is a man a bank robber, or is he
 pretending to be one?

  Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
  does the opposite of creating historical awareness

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (flogging the dead horse with wild abandon)

2012-06-12 Thread Michael Gilmer
 Concord horse kill has
 been discussed several times on the list in the meantime, yet the picture
 is still on the website. I hear you say these things are completely
 unrelated, and perhaps they are. And in the end this might all be peanuts
 even. Actually, right now, I ask myself what the heck I'm doing here. I
 actually enjoy doing
  the detective work on which account is true and which is doubtful! But
 why anyone actively wants to play a part in the confusion other than to
 cash in is a mystery to me.

 Enough said, Best wishes,

 Regine



 
  Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
 An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
 CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Gesendet: 20:20 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
 
 Hi Regine,
 
 I can't argue that point.  I can only say that we (as meteorite buffs)
 should do our best to educate the newbies, or make resources available
 that will educate the newbies.  I think many of us do that.  I also
 think we could do better if we really tried.  But I don't think
 everyone who uses the term hammer fall is engaging in marketing or
 trying to mislead people for financial gain.  Maybe some dealers do
 that.  If they do, I don't agree with that and they should stop.  But
 the term hammer fall probably isn't going away, and if it does, it
 will be replaced by another term that means the same thing.
 
 And we can't excuse people for making rash purchases.  The buyer does
 bear some responsibility to educate themselves before spending money
 on a meteorite (or anything).  I guess this gets back to some of the
 most fundamental lessons of collecting things.  Do one's homework.
 Buyer beware.  Know your seller.  Check references (or feedback).   :)
 
 Best regards,
 
 MikeG
 
 --
 ---
 Galactic Stone  Ironworks - MikeG
 
 Web: http://www.galactic-stone.com
 Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
 Twitter: http://twitter.com/GalacticStone
 RSS: http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
 ---
 
 
 On 6/12/12, Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de wrote:
  But what if said police chief won the lottery and would like to
  purchase the
  crumbs because the thing fell in his town?
  Of course the term is not that confusing to meteorite buffs, but to
  new
  collectors or people who just want to own the one rock from space.
 
  Cheers, Regine
 
 
 
  - Ursprüngliche Message -
  Von: Michael Gilmer meteoritem...@gmail.com
  An: Regine P. fips_br...@yahoo.de
  CC: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
  Gesendet: 19:27 Dienstag, 12.Juni 2012
  Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer fall term
 
  Hi Regine,
 
  I agree in principle with what you are saying here, I really do.  No
  meteorite fall should ever be pigeon-holed or categorized solely
  because a stone struck something, and therefore that stone has a
  higher financial value.  That completely defeats the purpose of
  collecting meteorites.
 
  Let me clarify a few of the points you raised :
 
   agree with the hammer fall term being misleading, and so far
  haven't met
   anyone who is very fond of it
   except those who actually see it as a market opportunity.
 
  I know of several collectors who use it, and they are not dealers and
  have no financial interest in using the term hammer fall.  Before I
  became a dealer, I was using it to describe my personal specimens.  I
  still use it because of what it means to me, and some other
  collectors, not because it is marketing.  Maybe others use it for
  marketing purposes - I would not argue against that.
 
  On the flip
   side I have met a few who were seriously confused by the term: The
   Sylacauga police chief for example, who sent me a link to an Ebay
   auction, thinking the speck pictured was a piece of the rock which
  hit
   Mrs. Hodges 
 
  I would expect our dear police chief to be confused - he is not a
  meteorite collector, he is a policeman.  Police officers use lots of
  terminology that is confusing to people who are not a part of the
  law-enforcement community.  Criminals are often referred to as
  actors - that is confusing to me.  Is a man a bank robber, or is he
  pretending to be one?
 
   Hammer fall on the other hand is simply a sales term which
   does the opposite of creating historical awareness: It completely
   overshadows all the other aspects (historical or other) of a
  meteorite
   shower.
 
  I suppose it could, for some people.  I don't see it that way.
 
   I'd find it fairly irritating if anyone used the term
  L'Aigle
   hammer fall, because one of the pieces (presumably) hit a man on
  the
   arm. 
 
  I agree 100%.  In my mind, L'Aigle is a historical fall if one
  must
  label it.  L'Aigle will always have supreme importance that goes far
  beyond anything (or person) that may have been struck by a stone.  Of
  course, it's

[meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (flogging the dead horse with wild abandon)

2012-06-12 Thread Shawn Alan
Mike G, Regina and Listers 

Mike G I have to commend you on the explanation on the term Hammer stone and 
Hammer Fall and Micheal Blood puts it best at this link 
http://www.michaelbloodmeteorites.com/MMT.html

Since I been collecting those terms have been in use. I fell the both come in 
hand in hand. You can not have one with out the other in those terms and I 
agree by adding that term to a meteorite can add value. Historic history adds 
value to a meteorite. Rarity adds value. Even nick names have added value to 
meteorites. At the end of the day, people collect Hammer Stones and people 
collect meteorites from Hammer Falls and just because some people on the List 
do not collect Hammer Stones or Hammer Fall's,  does not mean they have the 
right to say it is non since, silly, or useless word cause scientists do not 
use that term. But again, people are entitled to their own opinion and people 
are aloud to collect meteorites as they see fit for their collection.  

Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633
eBay Store
http://www.ebay.com/sch/ph0t0phl0w/m.html?





[meteorite-list] Hammer fall term (flogging the dead horse with wild 
abandon)
Michael Gilmer meteoritemike 
at gmail.com 
Tue Jun 12
22:04:45 EDT 2012 
* Previous message: [meteorite-list] Ensisheim 2012, 
latest news  
* Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject 
] [ author ] 


Hi Gang, 

Flogging dead equines is my specialty, along 
with waking sleeping canines. ;) 

This is long. Those who are tired of 
this discussion, please hit your 
delete button now. 

I'm not saying 
that every person who uses the term hammer fall is 
100% innocent of 
marketing gimmicks. I cannot speak for every dealer, 
just myself. I use the 
term. I have used it for years. One of the 
first things that really 
interested me about collecting was - 
different types and hammers. When I was 
new, I tried to amass a 
complete type collection. That is a common error 
many newbies make, 
because we don't realize what an expensive
and difficult 
process it is 
to complete a type collection that includes all rare types. 
So, I 
eventually abandoned the type collecting and moved over to hammers. 

I love hammers. I won't pretend to love them as much as Captain 
Blood, but his website and enthusiasm did influence me. And thanks to 
the internet, a wealth of information is available about all meteorite 
falls, including hammers. I couldn't get enough hammers, and I still 
can't completely slake my thirst for meteorites that hit things. I 
won't 
rest until I have a piece of Lorton.and Grimsby.and so 
on. Both of 
those are unattainable at the moment. But given 
patience, some portion of 
those specimens (especially Lorton) may be 
traded out into the private 
market - Just like the core section of the 
Hodges stone from Sylacauga. 

But I digress. My point is, some of us use the term hammer fall to 
express
the following information : 

1) the meteorite in question is 
a fall, and not a find. 
2) the fall is an event where one or more stones 
struck a manmade 
construct or a living thing. 

Having said that, if 
the fall is not a single-stone event, then other 
stones from that same fall 
may have hit nothing of consequence. They 
might have fallen in a field, in a 
forest, in a desert, on a 
mountainside, etc. Those stones are *not* hammer 
stones and should 
never be referred to as such. 

The stone(s) that 
actually did strike something manmade (or living) 
are hammer stones. 

If *any* stone from a fall strikes something manmade (or living), then 
that fall is a hammer fall and all stones from that fall can be 
referred to as originating from a hammer fall. However, as stated 
before, only the actual stones that hit something manmade or living 
are 
hammer stones. 

This is a simple concept and I don't see where all the 
confusion 
arises from. Maybe as a collector and dealer I am too close to the 
forest to see the trees on this one. I cannot go back in time and 
look 
at this as a newbie would. 

Let's use one of the most famous hammer falls 
as an example here - Sylacauga. 

Sylacauga is a hammer fall. It is also a 
witnessed fall. Given the 
fact that it set legal precedents and is the best 
documented case of a 
human being struck, it may one day be referred to as a 
historical 
fall. But I think the term historical is premature for 
Sylacauga. 
Let's wait another 50 years or so and then revisit the historical 
debate for this one. 

The Hodges stone is a hammer stone. 

The 
stone found by Julius McKinney is *not* a hammer stone. 

Both stones 
originate from a hammer fall. The usage of the hammer 
fall phrase does
not 
bestow hammer stone status upon the McKinney 
stone. The McKinney stone will 
never be a hammer stone, regardless of 
what term is used to describe the 
Sylacauga meteorite fall. We can 
call it a fall, a witnessed fall, a hammer 
fall, or late for dinner - 
but the Hodges stone will always be the sole 
hammer

Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Talk

2012-05-16 Thread Sterling K. Webb
OMG! 
It's the Eighties!

At Midnight!
On the Meteorite List!
What's Next?
Hot Tub Pool Party?

S. K. Webb

- Original Message - 
From: Shawn Alan photoph...@yahoo.com

To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Wednesday, May 16, 2012 12:06 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Talk


Hammer time - you can't touch this :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIHAkqCls4A

Shawn Alan
ebay Store
http://www.ebay.com/sch/ph0t0phl0w/m.html?
http://www.meteoritefalls.com/




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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Talk

2012-05-16 Thread Howard Wu
Can I play too?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hqyc37aOqT0



- Original Message -
From: Shawn Alan photoph...@yahoo.com
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Cc: 
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2012 10:06 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Talk

Hammer time - you can't touch this :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIHAkqCls4A
 
Shawn Alan
ebay Store
http://www.ebay.com/sch/ph0t0phl0w/m.html?
http://www.meteoritefalls.com/



[meteorite-list] Hammer Talk
JoshuaTreeMuseum joshuatreemuseum 
at embarqmail.com 
Wed May 16 00:39:53 EDT 2012 
* Previous message: [meteorite-list] SUTTER'S MILL 
Micros - ALL SOLD!!!  
* Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject 
] [ author ] 


If there's one thing I never tire of on the Meteorite List, 
it's the 
fascinating, seemingly never-ending discussion of what does and 
does not 
constitute a hammer stone. It never gets old. You have semantics, 
definitions, degrees of hammerness, lively arguments over what is or is not 
a man-made object. Passionate manifestos are issued. The meteorite world 
splits into factions and alliances are formed. Tempers flare, innuendos are 
hurled, dramatic outbursts and character assassinations are the order of the 
day. Finally a truce and working definition are hammered out, allowing more 
time for everyone to discuss the latest antics of their favorite dealers. 

Phil Whitmer 
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum 





* Previous message: [meteorite-list] SUTTER'S MILL 
Micros - ALL SOLD!!!  
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] [ author ] 


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[meteorite-list] Hammer Talk

2012-05-15 Thread JoshuaTreeMuseum
If there's one thing I never tire of on the Meteorite List, it's the 
fascinating, seemingly never-ending discussion of what does and does not 
constitute a hammer stone. It never gets old. You have semantics, 
definitions, degrees of hammerness, lively arguments over what is or is not 
a man-made object. Passionate manifestos are issued. The meteorite world 
splits into factions and alliances are formed. Tempers flare, innuendos are 
hurled, dramatic outbursts and character assassinations are the order of the 
day. Finally a truce and working definition are hammered out, allowing more 
time for everyone to discuss the latest antics of their favorite dealers.


Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum 


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Talk

2012-05-15 Thread Shawn Alan
Hammer time - you can't touch this :)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIHAkqCls4A
 
Shawn Alan
ebay Store
http://www.ebay.com/sch/ph0t0phl0w/m.html?
http://www.meteoritefalls.com/



[meteorite-list] Hammer Talk
JoshuaTreeMuseum joshuatreemuseum 
at embarqmail.com 
Wed May 16 00:39:53 EDT 2012 
* Previous message: [meteorite-list] SUTTER'S MILL 
Micros - ALL SOLD!!!  
* Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject 
] [ author ] 


If there's one thing I never tire of on the Meteorite List, 
it's the 
fascinating, seemingly never-ending discussion of what does and 
does not 
constitute a hammer stone. It never gets old. You have semantics, 
definitions, degrees of hammerness, lively arguments over what is or is not 
a man-made object. Passionate manifestos are issued. The meteorite world 
splits into factions and alliances are formed. Tempers flare, innuendos are 
hurled, dramatic outbursts and character assassinations are the order of the 
day. Finally a truce and working definition are hammered out, allowing more 
time for everyone to discuss the latest antics of their favorite dealers. 

Phil Whitmer 
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum 





* Previous message: [meteorite-list] SUTTER'S MILL 
Micros - ALL SOLD!!!  
* Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject 
] [ author ] 


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[meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread pshugar
Hello List and Happy turkey day to all,
Suppose someone gets really ticked off at his/her
spouse and picks up a meteorite, bashing said spouse
in the noggin, killing said spouse.
Would this be a hammer or just a murder weapon?
Both?
Pete

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread mafer
Get a lawyer Pete


On 6:14:46 pm 11/23/11 pshu...@messengersfromthecosmos.com wrote:
 Hello List and Happy turkey day to all,
 Suppose someone gets really ticked off at his/her
 spouse and picks up a meteorite, bashing said spouse
 in the noggin, killing said spouse.
 Would this be a hammer or just a murder weapon?
 Both?
 Pete

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread David R Childs

Pete,
I would suggest it would be a 'hamurder', and I would advise a good getaway 
vehicle


David
- Original Message - 
From: ma...@imagineopals.com

To: pshu...@messengersfromthecosmos.com
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2011 6:17 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???



Get a lawyer Pete


On 6:14:46 pm 11/23/11 pshu...@messengersfromthecosmos.com wrote:

Hello List and Happy turkey day to all,
Suppose someone gets really ticked off at his/her
spouse and picks up a meteorite, bashing said spouse
in the noggin, killing said spouse.
Would this be a hammer or just a murder weapon?
Both?
Pete

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[meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread dorifry
OK, now that this discussion has descended into just plain silliness, if a 
meteorite hit and killed a pig, would it be a ham-hammer?


Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum 


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread Andreas Gren
If a torpedo hits a hammerhead shark, is it a hammer again?


Andi

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread Martin Altmann

Of course, Andi.

And if that happens there:
http://www.holger-melms.de/Ha06Uenden.jpg

they will celebrate a ..?

Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Andreas
Gren

If a torpedo hits a hammerhead shark, is it a hammer again?


Andi


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread Zelimir . Gabelica


.hamerhead shark hammered by a hammer meteorite in Hammerfest bay!

Zelimir



Martin Altmann altm...@meteorite-martin.de a écrit :



Of course, Andi.

And if that happens there:
http://www.holger-melms.de/Ha06Uenden.jpg

they will celebrate a ..?

Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Andreas
Gren

If a torpedo hits a hammerhead shark, is it a hammer again?


Andi


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread David R Childs

Nope, Just a HAMMER! (this is getting silly)

David R Childs
- Original Message - 
From: dorifry dori...@embarqmail.com

To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2011 7:52 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Hammer???


OK, now that this discussion has descended into just plain silliness, if a 
meteorite hit and killed a pig, would it be a ham-hammer?


Phil Whitmer
Joshua Tree Earth  Space Museum
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer hammers!

2011-11-23 Thread Martin Altmann
The history of hammers?

Hits for hammer used for meteorites as,well, as hammers, per year of this
list:

2001   zero
20022 (Captain B. commercial)
2003   24 (mainly Park Forest  dealers)
20044 (Worden article)
2005   10 (mainly jokes about the hammers concept)
2006  103 (eeek, it went out of control!)
2007  116
2008 iiih it's too horrible to continue!


Walter, Walter, what have you done???!!!

Kids, I declare the year 2006, to be that year, when the hammer was
invented.

...and since then, we have to pay suddenly 3-10 times more for the good ol
falls afflicted
and each and every falls-addicted prays, whenever the news of a possible
fall or shower goes round, that no crumb hasn't hit anything else but the
ground, for him being able still to afford a little piece.

It started as a harmless fun and was turned into a very successful marketing
campaign.
Respect!

And we're singing: Hit the Road, Jack!

;-)
Martin

PS: The holes hysteria wasn't so everlasting.
Maybe we could combine them..
Hammers with holes, which hit holes...

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread Matthias Bärmann


And if it would've happened 50 or 60 years before over the UN building with 
its boss  http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dag_Hammarskj%C3%B6ld , we'd 
celebrate a ... ?


But now, attention, the super-scenery ... drum roll ... : a meteorite falls 
down and hits frontally a hammer. What are we speaking about?


Harr, and ultimately, if Thor`s hammer, obviously a meteorite, hits a hammer 
in Burghammer - what the hell would it cost/gm ???


Best,
Matthias


- Original Message - 
From: Martin Altmann altm...@meteorite-martin.de

To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Wednesday, November 23, 2011 9:37 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???



Of course, Andi.

And if that happens there:
http://www.holger-melms.de/Ha06Uenden.jpg

they will celebrate a ..?

Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Andreas
Gren

If a torpedo hits a hammerhead shark, is it a hammer again?


Andi


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(2023) __


E-Mail wurde geprüft mit ESET Smart Security.

http://www.eset.com




__ Hinweis von ESET Smart Security, Signaturdatenbank-Version 6654 
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[meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread pshugar
I'll be OK as long as I don't use the same rocket
as the Grunt mission.
Pete


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer hammers!

2011-11-23 Thread Graham Ensor
Now...getting back to fantastic meteorites... here's a picture of a
real hammerstill on Svend's website but now in my own
collection...

Check out the third picture down and read the description on his great
website...probably my favourite acquisition.

http://www.niger-meteorite-recon.de/en/Meteoritensammlung_17.htm

Graham

On Wed, Nov 23, 2011 at 10:44 PM, Martin Altmann
altm...@meteorite-martin.de wrote:
 The history of hammers?

 Hits for hammer used for meteorites as,well, as hammers, per year of this
 list:

 2001   zero
 2002    2     (Captain B. commercial)
 2003   24     (mainly Park Forest  dealers)
 2004    4     (Worden article)
 2005   10     (mainly jokes about the hammers concept)
 2006  103     (eeek, it went out of control!)
 2007  116
 2008     iiih it's too horrible to continue!


 Walter, Walter, what have you done???!!!

 Kids, I declare the year 2006, to be that year, when the hammer was
 invented.

 ...and since then, we have to pay suddenly 3-10 times more for the good ol
 falls afflicted
 and each and every falls-addicted prays, whenever the news of a possible
 fall or shower goes round, that no crumb hasn't hit anything else but the
 ground, for him being able still to afford a little piece.

 It started as a harmless fun and was turned into a very successful marketing
 campaign.
 Respect!

 And we're singing: Hit the Road, Jack!

 ;-)
 Martin

 PS: The holes hysteria wasn't so everlasting.
 Maybe we could combine them..
 Hammers with holes, which hit holes...

 __
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 http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer hammers!

2011-11-23 Thread Luther Jackson
Having seen this specimen in the flesh a few weeks ago, I have to agree it's 
amazing. To think it was used so long ago as a tool, probably by many 
generations, it truly is something special.

Luther



On 23 Nov 2011, at 23:39, Graham Ensor graham.en...@gmail.com wrote:

 Now...getting back to fantastic meteorites... here's a picture of a
 real hammerstill on Svend's website but now in my own
 collection...
 
 Check out the third picture down and read the description on his great
 website...probably my favourite acquisition.
 
 http://www.niger-meteorite-recon.de/en/Meteoritensammlung_17.htm
 
 Graham
 
 On Wed, Nov 23, 2011 at 10:44 PM, Martin Altmann
 altm...@meteorite-martin.de wrote:
 The history of hammers?
 
 Hits for hammer used for meteorites as,well, as hammers, per year of this
 list:
 
 2001   zero
 20022 (Captain B. commercial)
 2003   24 (mainly Park Forest  dealers)
 20044 (Worden article)
 2005   10 (mainly jokes about the hammers concept)
 2006  103 (eeek, it went out of control!)
 2007  116
 2008 iiih it's too horrible to continue!
 
 
 Walter, Walter, what have you done???!!!
 
 Kids, I declare the year 2006, to be that year, when the hammer was
 invented.
 
 ...and since then, we have to pay suddenly 3-10 times more for the good ol
 falls afflicted
 and each and every falls-addicted prays, whenever the news of a possible
 fall or shower goes round, that no crumb hasn't hit anything else but the
 ground, for him being able still to afford a little piece.
 
 It started as a harmless fun and was turned into a very successful marketing
 campaign.
 Respect!
 
 And we're singing: Hit the Road, Jack!
 
 ;-)
 Martin
 
 PS: The holes hysteria wasn't so everlasting.
 Maybe we could combine them..
 Hammers with holes, which hit holes...
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

2011-11-23 Thread Alexander Seidel
...someone who speaks out such ideas may have been hit by such a cosmic stone 
on his head... [translated into English, may be poorly, sorry].

When was this said, in what connection, and who where the people involved 
(hint: it´s been long, long ago, well not really for a meteorite and it´s very 
own time scale, but quite a few generations ago for us living meteorite 
aficionados nowadays)?

Now, that´s what I would call a real *HAMMER* statement, isn´t it?! Every 
serious collector should know at least part of the answer...

Seriously, folks: it may be important to always know where a/the hammer hangs, 
but isn´t the concept of a hammer fall somewhat overstressed these days...???

Alex
Berlin/Germany



 Original-Nachricht 
 Datum: Wed, 23 Nov 2011 22:17:53 +0100
 Von: zelimir.gabel...@uha.fr
 An: Martin Altmann altm...@meteorite-martin.de
 CC: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer???

 
 .hamerhead shark hammered by a hammer meteorite in Hammerfest bay!
 
 Zelimir
 
 
 
 Martin Altmann altm...@meteorite-martin.de a écrit :
 
 
  Of course, Andi.
 
  And if that happens there:
  http://www.holger-melms.de/Ha06Uenden.jpg
 
  they will celebrate a ..?
 
  Martin
 
  -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
  Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
  [mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von
 Andreas
  Gren
 
  If a torpedo hits a hammerhead shark, is it a hammer again?
 
 
  Andi
 
 
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[meteorite-list] Hammer stones

2011-02-08 Thread Derek Yoost
Hi My name is Derek Yoost and I just rejoined the Meteorite List.  Is there 
a master list of all the hammer stones?  I'm updating my list and I included 
a column for the hammer stones.  Thanks for your time, Derek. 


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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer stones

2011-02-08 Thread Gary Fujihara
I don't know about a master list Derek, but you can check on Michael Blood's 
site for a list of Hammer stones:

Hammers 1790-1954: http://www.michaelbloodmeteorites.com/Hammers1.html
Hammers 1959-2010: http://www.michaelbloodmeteorites.com/Hammers2.html

gary

On Feb 8, 2011, at 4:37 PM, Derek Yoost wrote:

 Hi My name is Derek Yoost and I just rejoined the Meteorite List.  Is there a 
 master list of all the hammer stones?  I'm updating my list and I included a 
 column for the hammer stones.  Thanks for your time, Derek. 
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Gary Fujihara
Big Kahuna Meteorites (IMCA#1693)
105 Puhili Place, Hilo, Hawai'i 96720
http://bigkahuna-meteorites.com/
http://shop.ebay.com/fujmon/m.html  
(808) 640-9161

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer stones

2011-02-08 Thread Chris Spratt

Try here: references are listed.

http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/icq/meteorites.html

Chris
(Via my iPhone)
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer stones

2011-02-08 Thread Pete Pete

Hi Chris and List,
 
Reading through the falls listed on your linked site reminded me of the 
excitement this List had for the Carancas fall in 2007. 
 
Does that crater still exist?
It seemed predictable at that time that the crater would quickly vanish from 
erosion, become a cattle watering hole, or the town's new cesspool.
 
Cheers,
Pete
 



 From: cspr...@islandnet.com
 To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Tue, 8 Feb 2011 19:50:27 -0800
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer stones

 Try here: references are listed.

 http://www.cfa.harvard.edu/icq/meteorites.html

 Chris
 (Via my iPhone)
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[meteorite-list] hammer well almost

2010-11-04 Thread drtanuki
Smithville man almost hit by meteorite
WKRN Nashville Thu, 04 Nov 2010 16:54 PM PDT
Jimmy Duncan was nearly hit by a meteorite in August as it fell from the sky.   
sorry I lost the url
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-22 Thread Bob Loeffler
Ok, then I'm glad I didn't start collecting hammers because that should
dramatically increase the hammer count out there.   :-)  So West is
definitely a hammer because it fell on farmland.

Bob


-Original Message-
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Darren
Garrison
Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2009 12:41 PM
To: 'Meteorite List'
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

On Sun, 15 Mar 2009 12:35:29 -0600, you wrote:

Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases on the field are, so are
the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but is the grass and dirt?
If
the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the house lawns across the world
since humans planted or landscaped them.  

Yes, every place kept with a cover of grass which would, when left to
nature,
revert to forest in just a few years is an artificially maintained,
unnatural
human artifact.  
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-22 Thread Darren Garrison
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:22:21 -0600, you wrote:

Ok, then I'm glad I didn't start collecting hammers because that should
dramatically increase the hammer count out there.   :-)  So West is
definitely a hammer because it fell on farmland.

Okay, even I don't actually claim that hitting a mowed lawn makes a meteorite a
hammer-- but a mowed lawn is an artifact.

Someone mentioned a few days back, IIRC, that a meteorite landing on a golf
course wouldn't make it a hammer.  But I'm willing to bet if they found one
inside one of the 18 holes, they'd be suddenly rethinking the use of that term.
:-)



Bob


-Original Message-
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Darren
Garrison
Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2009 12:41 PM
To: 'Meteorite List'
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

On Sun, 15 Mar 2009 12:35:29 -0600, you wrote:

Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases on the field are, so are
the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but is the grass and dirt?
If
the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the house lawns across the world
since humans planted or landscaped them.  

Yes, every place kept with a cover of grass which would, when left to
nature,
revert to forest in just a few years is an artificially maintained,
unnatural
human artifact.  
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-22 Thread Michael Blood
NO, West Texas is a hammer because it hit
A barn  (some may argue, as well, that it hit
A grave - but that would be a grave matter).
Michael


 From: Bob Loeffler b...@peaktopeak.com
 Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:22:21 -0600
 To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions
 
 Ok, then I'm glad I didn't start collecting hammers because that should
 dramatically increase the hammer count out there.   :-)  So West is
 definitely a hammer because it fell on farmland.
 
 Bob
 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
 [mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Darren
 Garrison
 Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2009 12:41 PM
 To: 'Meteorite List'
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions
 
 On Sun, 15 Mar 2009 12:35:29 -0600, you wrote:
 
 Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases on the field are, so are
 the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but is the grass and dirt?
 If
 the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the house lawns across the world
 since humans planted or landscaped them.
 
 Yes, every place kept with a cover of grass which would, when left to
 nature,
 revert to forest in just a few years is an artificially maintained,
 unnatural
 human artifact.  
 __
 http://www.meteoritecentral.com
 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-22 Thread Howard Wu

Is is right to call any or every speciemen from meteorite fall a hammer if one 
piece hits something man made, or only that piece that does the hitting.

Howard


--- On Sun, 3/22/09, Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net wrote:

 From: Michael Blood mlbl...@cox.net
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions
 To: Bob Loeffler b...@peaktopeak.com, Meteorite List 
 meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Sunday, March 22, 2009, 1:33 PM
 NO, West Texas is a hammer because it hit
 A barn  (some may argue, as well, that it hit
 A grave - but that would be a grave matter).
 Michael
 
 
  From: Bob Loeffler b...@peaktopeak.com
  Date: Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:22:21 -0600
  To: Meteorite List
 meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
  Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions
  
  Ok, then I'm glad I didn't start collecting
 hammers because that should
  dramatically increase the hammer count out
 there.   :-)  So West is
  definitely a hammer because it fell on farmland.
  
  Bob
  
  
  -Original Message-
  From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
  [mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com]
 On Behalf Of Darren
  Garrison
  Sent: Sunday, March 15, 2009 12:41 PM
  To: 'Meteorite List'
  Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions
  
  On Sun, 15 Mar 2009 12:35:29 -0600, you wrote:
  
  Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases
 on the field are, so are
  the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but
 is the grass and dirt?
  If
  the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the
 house lawns across the world
  since humans planted or landscaped them.
  
  Yes, every place kept with a cover of grass which
 would, when left to
  nature,
  revert to forest in just a few years is an
 artificially maintained,
  unnatural
  human artifact.  
  __
  http://www.meteoritecentral.com
  Meteorite-list mailing list
  Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
  
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 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
 
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] hammer grammer...

2009-03-18 Thread Meteorites USA
oopsy... I used the singular instead of the plural. Sorry about that 
there mistake guys... ;)


It should have said salesmen and not salesman!

Regards,
Eric
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-15 Thread Bob Loeffler
Hi Michael,

 I have 10 or 11 DIFFERENT Park Forest hammer stone specimens
 - Several houses, a Plymouth, a tow truck, a fire station,
 a baseball Field, a fence, etc.

Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases on the field are, so are
the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but is the grass and dirt?  If
the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the house lawns across the world
since humans planted or landscaped them.  I'm not trying to start an
argument, but just want to get this loophole closed/clarified for all of the
hammer collectors out there.  Most of the trees in Phoenix were planted by
humans over the last couple hundred years, so if a meteorite hits a tree in
Phoenix, would that be considered a hammer stone?  I mention Phoenix because
that is where I am from and I know that most of the trees are not indigenous
to the area (besides the palo verdes, cottonwoods, some of the palms, etc).
And yes, many of the palms, palo verdes, etc were also planted/transplanted
to their current locations by people, so...

Thanks for any clarification to this question.

Bob


-Original Message-
From: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of Michael
Blood
Sent: Monday, March 09, 2009 3:19 PM
To: Jeff Grossman; Meteorite List
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

Jeff,
This has been established in the nomenclature over the
Last few years as follows:

1) A hammer is a specimen which was part of a fall in which
one or more stones or irons struck an artifact, animal or human

2) A hammer stone is one of the actual specimens of the
Fall that, itself, struck said artifact, animal or human.

3) Many specimens are collected as a hammer because they
Were part of the fall but did not (or it is not know if they),
Themselves strike the artifact/animal or human.

4) Many Hammer falls had only one stone out of many strike
Something, but the other stones were all part of that one
Meteoroid prior to break up, yes?

5) Of course, a hammer stone, itself is more valuable to a hammer
Collector than merely one of the specimens of the fall (I have
10 or 11 DIFFERENT Park Forest hammer stone specimens -
Several houses, a Plymouth, a tow truck, a fire station, a baseball
Field, a fence, etc.

6) I have little interest in collecting Homestead as a hammer, except
Spcimens cut from the one stone that broke the horse corral fence.

Pretty much, in other words, if you are a hammer enthusiast,
Ya takes what cha can git.
Best wishes, Michael

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-15 Thread Darren Garrison
On Sun, 15 Mar 2009 12:35:29 -0600, you wrote:

Is a baseball field a human artifact?  The bases on the field are, so are
the bleachers, chalk lines on the field, etc, but is the grass and dirt?  If
the grass and dirt are, then so are all of the house lawns across the world
since humans planted or landscaped them.  

Yes, every place kept with a cover of grass which would, when left to nature,
revert to forest in just a few years is an artificially maintained, unnatural
human artifact.  
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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer Definitions

2009-03-09 Thread Michael Blood
Jeff,
This has been established in the nomenclature over the
Last few years as follows:

1) A hammer is a specimen which was part of a fall in which
one or more stones or irons struck an artifact, animal or human

2) A hammer stone is one of the actual specimens of the
Fall that, itself, struck said artifact, animal or human.

3) Many specimens are collected as a hammer because they
Were part of the fall but did not (or it is not know if they),
Themselves strike the artifact/animal or human.

4) Many Hammer falls had only one stone out of many strike
Something, but the other stones were all part of that one
Meteoroid prior to break up, yes?

5) Of course, a hammer stone, itself is more valuable to a hammer
Collector than merely one of the specimens of the fall (I have
10 or 11 DIFFERENT Park Forest hammer stone specimens -
Several houses, a Plymouth, a tow truck, a fire station, a baseball
Field, a fence, etc.

6) I have little interest in collecting Homestead as a hammer, except
Spcimens cut from the one stone that broke the horse corral fence.

Pretty much, in other words, if you are a hammer enthusiast,
Ya takes what cha can git.
Best wishes, Michael


 From: Jeff Grossman jgross...@usgs.gov
 Date: Mon, 09 Mar 2009 13:00:31 -0400
 To: Meteorite List meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Witnessed Falls and Hammers - warning, LONG.
 
 It seems to me that this marketing term hammer should only be applied
 to the actual stone(s) that hit a structure, not an entire shower.
 Thus, Moss stone #5 is a hammer since it went through a roof, but stone
 #2 is not since it only hit a tree and landed in some grass.
 
 jeff
 
 m...@mhmeteorites.com wrote:
 I think to be considered a hammer the meteorite needs to hit a human-made
 structure, like a building or car. Seems to me that many have taken the term
 and bastardized it to the point where it has lost its true meaning and
 interest (at least to me).
 Matt
 Matt Morgan
 Mile High Meteorites
 http://www.mhmeteorites.com
 P.O. Box 151293
 Lakewood, CO 80215 USA
 
 -Original Message-
 From: Martin Altmann altm...@meteorite-martin.de
 
 Date: Mon, 9 Mar 2009 17:13:33
 To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Witnessed Falls and Hammers - warning, LONG.
 
 
 Ehm is Ourique a hammer too?
 It hit a man made dirt road.
 And Hosur made a hole in a road too.
 
 
 -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
 Von: meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com
 [mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Michael
 Gilmer
 Gesendet: Montag, 9. März 2009 16:57
 An: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Betreff: [meteorite-list] Witnessed Falls and Hammers - warning, LONG.
 
 
 Hi Listees! :)
 
 I was compiling my latest inventory list, when I noticed that my
 collection of witnessed falls and hammers is growing to a
 semi-respectable number - albeit still quite small compared to some
 of the envious collections other list members have.
 
 So I thought I would ask the list - how many witnessed falls and
 how many hammers do you have in your collection?
 
 Right now, I have 25 witnessed falls and 11 hammers :
 
 Hammer falls -
 
 Allende
 Carancas
 Claxton
 Gao Guenie
 Holbrook
 Moss
 Murchison
 New Orleans
 Park Forest
 Peekskill
 Weston
 
 Other witnessed falls -
 
 Bassikounou
 Chergach
 Ensisheim
 Juvinas
 Norton County
 Shalka
 Sikhote Alin
 Tagish Lake
 Tamdakht
 Tatahouine
 Udei Station
 West Texas
 Zag
 Zagami
 
 This is only the beginning of my obsession with certain witnessed
 falls and hammers.  I only collect recent falls that happened
 after I started collecting in late 2006.  So, basically from
 Bassikounou forward is fair game.  This is an arbitrary starting
 point, but it has meaning for me and gives me a firm boundary
 line to base my fall collection on.  I am missing quite a few
 recent falls - mainly the hard to acquire ones like Cali, Berduc,
 Buzzard Coulee and others which are not legally on the market or
 are too rare/expensive for me to afford at the moment.
 
 As for my hammers - I have no conditions on collecting them.  Any
 meteorite or fall that struck something is fair game and I want it.
 The more interesting the story behind a given hammer, the more
 interested I am in acquiring it.  Claxton is awesome.  Imagine
 how small a mailbox is.  Even when considering there are millions
 of postal boxes around the world, what are the chances of a
 meteorite hitting one?  To me, that is interesting.  Peekskill
 is another great hammer - it creamed a Chevy Malibu. Of course,
 Peekskill may have been more interesting if it had struck an
 occupied vehicle, a police car, a hearse, or some other exceptional
 circumstance.  But until that happens, a Chevy Malibu will suffice. ;)
 
 New Orleans?  Very interesting.  First, it struck a house, but
 it also tore a path of destruction through the house, destroying
 a desk.  That makes it worth collecting.  But even more 

[meteorite-list] HAMMER STONE LIST

2007-01-22 Thread Sterling K. Webb
Hi, List,

Since Walt Branch's great list of hammer
stones does not seem to be accessible from
the front end of the IMCA site via any link,
here's how you get to it. (It appears that the
IMCA is transitioning websites right now...)
http://imca.repetti.net/metinfo/metstruck.html

And here's one hammer stone that isn't on 
that list:

TSUKUBA (JAPAN) H5-6 1996
After a luminous meteor and violent detonations,
23 stones totalling ~800 g (largest, 177.5g) were
recovered, including one that penetrated a roof.
(Catalogue of Meteorites, Grady et al., 2000)

Sterling K. Webb


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[meteorite-list] Hammer story in LATimes

2007-01-06 Thread doctor death
Is this old new?
-

NATION IN BRIEF / NEW JERSEY
Tiny meteorite crashes into house
From Times Wire Reports
January 6, 2007


A mysterious object that crashed through the roof of a home and landed in 
the bathroom was a meteorite, experts said. No one was injured.

For now, scientists are calling the dense metallic object Freehold 
Township after the place where it fell. The meteorite, about the size of a 
golf ball, weighs about 13 ounces. Geologists determined it was an iron 
meteorite because of its density and magnetic properties.

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Re: [meteorite-list] Hammer story in LATimes

2007-01-06 Thread Matson, Robert
NATION IN BRIEF / NEW JERSEY
Tiny meteorite crashes into house
From Times Wire Reports
January 6, 2007

 A mysterious object that crashed through the roof of a home
 and landed in the bathroom was a meteorite, experts said.
 No one was injured.

 For now, scientists are calling the dense metallic object
 Freehold Township after the place where it fell. The
 meteorite, about the size of a golf ball, weighs about
 13 ounces. Geologists determined it was an iron meteorite
 because of its density and magnetic properties.

This is a typical example of the quality of science reporting
in the L.A. Times (and/or whatever wire service they used).

#1  They don't explain WHY the object is or was mysterious;
meteorites themselves aren't mysterious.  The whole reason
this story is mysterious is that the metal object looks
nothing like a *freshly fallen* meteorite, and yet the object
may very well be a meteorite.  THAT'S THE STORY!

#2  *Geologists* determined it was an iron meteorite based
SOLELY on density and magnetic properties?!  I doubt it.
Geologists are brighter than that.  Any lump of iron would
pass such a test.  Some additional quality of the object
led them to rule out a manmade object.  What was it? 

#3  Why do they continue to repeat the comparison with a
golf ball?  The object isn't spherical, and it's certainly
larger than a golf ball in at least one dimension.

As I wrote earlier, it wouldn't surprise me at all if the
object turns out to be a meteorite.  That's not the story
here.  How does a fresh meteorite fall end up looking like
this object?  You can argue semantics about whether iron
meteorites have fusion crusts or not, but the exterior
MUST be altered by its hypersonic atmospheric encounter,
and none of the pictures I've seen show the hallmarks of
such fresh alteration.  So the question is:  has any kind
of test been done to confirm this is a fresh fall?  If
not, why not?

--Rob
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