Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule

2015-01-23 Thread Gmail via Meteorite-list
At least they did not name it Coorslite.

Mendy Ouzillou

On Jan 23, 2015, at 6:28 PM, Galactic Stone & Ironworks via Meteorite-list 
 wrote:

Is this Carlsbergite pasteurized?

Meteorites containing Carlsbergite cannot be purchased by collectors
under the age of 21.

Too much Carlsbergite causes "beer goggles" making weathered
meteorites look pretty.

Meteorites with Carlsbergite have a frothy crust.

Somebody stop me


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On 1/23/15, Shawn Alan via Meteorite-list
 wrote:
> Hello Listers
> 
> DID the SAY BEER :)
> 
> Enjoy
> 
> Shawn Alan
> IMCA 1633
> ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
> Website http://meteoritefalls.com
> 
> 
> Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule
> 15:55 22 January 2015 by Catherine Brahic
> For similar stories, visit the Solar System and Cosmology Topic Guides
> 
> 
> Take a deep breath. Can you taste the flavour of ancient space? Nitrogen
> in Earth's atmosphere has been traced back to the spinning disc of dust
> and gas that formed our solar system, and may even have yielded ammonia
> to fuel organic reactions. This all comes courtesy of a meteorite found
> in Antarctica named after a popular brand of beer.
> 
> "Our [meteorite] samples were collected in Antarctica in the late
> 1970s," says Dennis Harries of The Friedrich-Schiller University in
> Jena, Germany. "They fell there hundreds or thousands of years ago."
> Known as chondritic meteorites, their history goes back some 4.6 billion
> years. At that time, our solar system was a vast disc of dust and gas,
> called the protoplanetary disc, spinning around the sun.
> 
> Harries and his colleagues were studying the make-up of the meteorites
> when they found a mineral called carlsbergite, named after the Carlsberg
> Foundation, an offshoot of the Danish brewery, which funded previous
> work on it.
> 
> Carlsbergite is a rare composite of chromium and nitrogen. Because of
> the meteorite's age, it acts like a time capsule, telling us about the
> form these elements were in while our planet was forming. Looking at the
> ratio of nitrogen isotopes in his samples, Harries found that it was
> very close to the ratio in the nitrogen that makes up two-thirds of
> Earth's atmosphere today. That suggests they have a common origin, and
> the nitrogen in our atmosphere came from the protoplanetary disc.
> 
> 
> 
> From a cold start
> 
> As for the formation of the carlsbergite itself, Harries imagines "a
> dusty volume of space in which dust grains were freely floating in a
> very thin gas - almost a vacuum. These grains may have been covered by
> thin shells of ice containing ammonia and other compounds."
> 
> Source:http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26836-meteorite-mineral-named-after-beer-is-time-capsule.html#.VML_42ctG00
> 
> __
> 
> Visit the Archives at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com
> Meteorite-list mailing list
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Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule

2015-01-23 Thread Galactic Stone & Ironworks via Meteorite-list
Is this Carlsbergite pasteurized?

Meteorites containing Carlsbergite cannot be purchased by collectors
under the age of 21.

Too much Carlsbergite causes "beer goggles" making weathered
meteorites look pretty.

Meteorites with Carlsbergite have a frothy crust.

Somebody stop me


-- 
-
Web - http://www.galactic-stone.com
Facebook - http://www.facebook.com/galacticstone
Twitter - http://twitter.com/galacticstone
Pinterest - http://pinterest.com/galacticstone
-
On 1/23/15, Shawn Alan via Meteorite-list
 wrote:
> Hello Listers
>
> DID the SAY BEER :)
>
> Enjoy
>
> Shawn Alan
> IMCA 1633
> ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
> Website http://meteoritefalls.com
>
>
> Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule
> 15:55 22 January 2015 by Catherine Brahic
> For similar stories, visit the Solar System and Cosmology Topic Guides
>
>
> Take a deep breath. Can you taste the flavour of ancient space? Nitrogen
> in Earth's atmosphere has been traced back to the spinning disc of dust
> and gas that formed our solar system, and may even have yielded ammonia
> to fuel organic reactions. This all comes courtesy of a meteorite found
> in Antarctica named after a popular brand of beer.
>
> "Our [meteorite] samples were collected in Antarctica in the late
> 1970s," says Dennis Harries of The Friedrich-Schiller University in
> Jena, Germany. "They fell there hundreds or thousands of years ago."
> Known as chondritic meteorites, their history goes back some 4.6 billion
> years. At that time, our solar system was a vast disc of dust and gas,
> called the protoplanetary disc, spinning around the sun.
>
> Harries and his colleagues were studying the make-up of the meteorites
> when they found a mineral called carlsbergite, named after the Carlsberg
> Foundation, an offshoot of the Danish brewery, which funded previous
> work on it.
>
> Carlsbergite is a rare composite of chromium and nitrogen. Because of
> the meteorite's age, it acts like a time capsule, telling us about the
> form these elements were in while our planet was forming. Looking at the
> ratio of nitrogen isotopes in his samples, Harries found that it was
> very close to the ratio in the nitrogen that makes up two-thirds of
> Earth's atmosphere today. That suggests they have a common origin, and
> the nitrogen in our atmosphere came from the protoplanetary disc.
>
>
>
> From a cold start
>
> As for the formation of the carlsbergite itself, Harries imagines "a
> dusty volume of space in which dust grains were freely floating in a
> very thin gas - almost a vacuum. These grains may have been covered by
> thin shells of ice containing ammonia and other compounds."
>
> Source:http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26836-meteorite-mineral-named-after-beer-is-time-capsule.html#.VML_42ctG00
>
> __
>
> Visit the Archives at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com
> Meteorite-list mailing list
> Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
> https://pairlist3.pair.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
>
__

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[meteorite-list] Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule

2015-01-23 Thread Shawn Alan via Meteorite-list
Hello Listers 

DID the SAY BEER :)

Enjoy

Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633 
ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
Website http://meteoritefalls.com 


Meteorite mineral named after beer is time capsule
15:55 22 January 2015 by Catherine Brahic
For similar stories, visit the Solar System and Cosmology Topic Guides


Take a deep breath. Can you taste the flavour of ancient space? Nitrogen
in Earth's atmosphere has been traced back to the spinning disc of dust
and gas that formed our solar system, and may even have yielded ammonia
to fuel organic reactions. This all comes courtesy of a meteorite found
in Antarctica named after a popular brand of beer.

"Our [meteorite] samples were collected in Antarctica in the late
1970s," says Dennis Harries of The Friedrich-Schiller University in
Jena, Germany. "They fell there hundreds or thousands of years ago."
Known as chondritic meteorites, their history goes back some 4.6 billion
years. At that time, our solar system was a vast disc of dust and gas,
called the protoplanetary disc, spinning around the sun.

Harries and his colleagues were studying the make-up of the meteorites
when they found a mineral called carlsbergite, named after the Carlsberg
Foundation, an offshoot of the Danish brewery, which funded previous
work on it.

Carlsbergite is a rare composite of chromium and nitrogen. Because of
the meteorite's age, it acts like a time capsule, telling us about the
form these elements were in while our planet was forming. Looking at the
ratio of nitrogen isotopes in his samples, Harries found that it was
very close to the ratio in the nitrogen that makes up two-thirds of
Earth's atmosphere today. That suggests they have a common origin, and
the nitrogen in our atmosphere came from the protoplanetary disc.

  

From a cold start

As for the formation of the carlsbergite itself, Harries imagines "a
dusty volume of space in which dust grains were freely floating in a
very thin gas – almost a vacuum. These grains may have been covered by
thin shells of ice containing ammonia and other compounds."

Source:http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn26836-meteorite-mineral-named-after-beer-is-time-capsule.html#.VML_42ctG00

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