Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-18 Thread Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list
With regards to the Beta Taurids, Earth will be passing through one of the 
denser debris streams on the morning of June 29th, the best since 1975. It will 
be monitored by astronomers to determine if there are large particles present, 
large enough to create Tunguska type events. Telescopes will be focused on the 
moon as any impacts from smaller particles might be visible. Even those back 
yard astronomers with telescopes and CCD cameras trained on the moon might pick 
up some of these impacts.

Visual observers of the early morning sky might even spot large fireballs from 
Beta Taurid meteor stream.

I will be out an hour before sunrise to see any earth grazing meteors from this 
unusual daylight meteor shower... Hopefully not seeing a Tunguska type event 
over my head. But it would be very nice to have a meteorite fall in my front 
yard while I am watching. 

Other than the Richardton Meteorite that fell in the evening on the 30th of 
June, 1918 that could be a member of the Beta Taurids,there might be other 
meteorites that fell in the last part of June and early July that seemed to 
come out of the Sun's glare that might be from the Beta Taurids.  Something to 
consider and do some research on.

Here is an interesting article:

https://spaceweatherarchive.com/2019/06/04/june-is-the-best-month-for-daytime-meteor-showers/

Steve.

-- Original Message --
From: "Steve Schoner" 
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Subject: Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918
Date: Sat, 8 Jun 2019 14:04:53 GMT

The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918 

  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor shower, thought to be the 
source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  The Beta  Taurids are a 
daylight meteor shower starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting 
throughout the day and then below the horizon at the end of the day.  Though 
improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of the Beta 
Taurid meteor stream? 

  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came from 
the south west direction.  And I have yet to find any observers that stated the 
direction from which it came.

  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the subject of much study 
even today as it has isotopes that relate to having been close to the Sun, such 
as what one would expect of the parent body of the Beta Taurids Comet 
Encke.  At the end of this month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid meteor 
stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has masses large 
enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, there certainly will be smaller 
masses that could produce meteorites such as Richardton which fell on June 30th 
1918.  In fact any meteorite that fell on or around June 30th coming from the 
south west direction should be further examined to see if they have isotopic 
properties that one would expect having been close to the Sun. 

BTW:
I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since I 
became disabled in 2003, which pretty much eliminated me from hunting 
meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in making petrographic slides, mostly 
of meteorites (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to have thin 
sections made contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
 
I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.

Steve Schoner
IMCA 4470

Sad News For Meghan Markle And Prince Harry
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Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-08 Thread Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list
Frank,

It came from the SSW (south south west) traveling to the NNE?

>From this trajectory I now strongly suspect that the Richardton meteorite of 
>June 30th 1918 is indeed a member of the Beta Taurids.  And the fact that it 
>fragmented the way it did and that is is of a friable structure, further leads 
>me to believe that I might be right.  The huge Tunguska bolide, thought to be 
>a comet, broke up, vaporizing,  exploding miles above the ground most likely 
>due to its friable structure.  

Comets are not just ice as they are most commonly called "dirty snowballs" with 
dust and larger chunks of rocks inside.   In fact,  many asteroids that are 
being photographed close up show surface structure like a clustered pile of 
rocks, most likely the remnants of a earlier comet that has lost it's ice.   In 
fact one supposed rocky asteroid was recently photographed with a faint tail, 
probably dust and residual ice evaporation into space.

Steve Schoner   
IMCA 4470


 

-- Original Message --
From: Frank Cressy 
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com,  Steve Schoner 
, John Lutzon 
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918
Date: Sun, 9 Jun 2019 00:12:52 + (UTC)



Hi Steve & all,

I have the direction of Richardton coming from the SSW.  I have a copy of the 
strewnfield map in my book "From Weston to Creston" (2016).  The reference I 
got this from is from Murphy & Forsman (1998) Meteorites in North Dakota" in 
North Dakota Geol Survey Educ Series no 23, 23 pages.  

All the best,

Frank





On ‎Saturday‎, ‎June‎ ‎8‎, ‎2019‎ ‎03‎:‎15‎:‎11‎ 
‎PM‎ ‎PDT, John Lutzon via Meteorite-list 
 wrote: 






Hello Steve,

Yes, very nice to see you posting again. All Best!

John Lutzon

- Original Message - 
From: "Mike Tettenborn via Meteorite-list" 
To: "Steve Schoner" 
Cc: 
Sent: Saturday, June 08, 2019 5:22 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918


Steve,

Welcome back!  Glad you are still involved.  Has it been since 2003?  If I 
remember correctly it was a spider bite that sidelined 
you.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn

> On Jun 8, 2019, at 10:04 AM, Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list 
>  wrote:
>
> The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918
>
>  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
>this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor 
> shower, thought to be the source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  
> The Beta  Taurids are a daylight meteor shower 
> starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting throughout the day and 
> then below the horizon at the end of the day. 
> Though improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of 
> the Beta Taurid meteor stream?
>
>  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came 
>from the south west direction.  And I have yet to find 
> any observers that stated the direction from which it came.
>
>  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
>though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the 
> subject of much study even today as it has isotopes that relate to having 
> been close to the Sun, such as what one would expect of 
> the parent body of the Beta Taurids Comet Encke.  At the end of this 
> month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid meteor 
> stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has masses 
> large enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, 
> there certainly will be smaller masses that could produce meteorites such as 
> Richardton which fell on June 30th 1918.  In fact 
> any meteorite that fell on or around June 30th coming from the south west 
> direction should be further examined to see if they 
> have isotopic properties that one would expect having been close to the Sun.
>
> BTW:
> I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since 
> I became disabled in 2003, which pretty much 
> eliminated me from hunting meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in 
> making petrographic slides, mostly of meteorites 
> (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to have thin sections made 
> contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
>
> I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
> petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.
>
> Steve Schoner
> IMCA 4470
>
> 
> US MD: "I Beg Americans To Throw Out This Veg Now"
> dr-pedre-md.com
> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3331/5cfbc095cf4b140954083st02duc
> __
>
> Visit our Facebo

Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-08 Thread Frank Cressy via Meteorite-list


Hi Steve & all,

I have the direction of Richardton coming from the SSW.  I have a copy of the 
strewnfield map in my book "From Weston to Creston" (2016).  The reference I 
got this from is from Murphy & Forsman (1998) Meteorites in North Dakota" in 
North Dakota Geol Survey Educ Series no 23, 23 pages.  

All the best,

Frank





On ‎Saturday‎, ‎June‎ ‎8‎, ‎2019‎ ‎03‎:‎15‎:‎11‎ ‎PM‎ ‎PDT, John Lutzon via 
Meteorite-list  wrote: 






Hello Steve,

Yes, very nice to see you posting again. All Best!

John Lutzon

- Original Message - 
From: "Mike Tettenborn via Meteorite-list" 
To: "Steve Schoner" 
Cc: 
Sent: Saturday, June 08, 2019 5:22 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918


Steve,

Welcome back!  Glad you are still involved.  Has it been since 2003?  If I 
remember correctly it was a spider bite that sidelined 
you.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn

> On Jun 8, 2019, at 10:04 AM, Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list 
>  wrote:
>
> The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918
>
>  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
>this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor 
> shower, thought to be the source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  
> The Beta  Taurids are a daylight meteor shower 
> starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting throughout the day and 
> then below the horizon at the end of the day. 
> Though improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of 
> the Beta Taurid meteor stream?
>
>  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came from 
>the south west direction.  And I have yet to find 
> any observers that stated the direction from which it came.
>
>  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
>though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the 
> subject of much study even today as it has isotopes that relate to having 
> been close to the Sun, such as what one would expect of 
> the parent body of the Beta Taurids Comet Encke.  At the end of this 
> month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid meteor 
> stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has masses 
> large enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, 
> there certainly will be smaller masses that could produce meteorites such as 
> Richardton which fell on June 30th 1918.  In fact 
> any meteorite that fell on or around June 30th coming from the south west 
> direction should be further examined to see if they 
> have isotopic properties that one would expect having been close to the Sun.
>
> BTW:
> I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since 
> I became disabled in 2003, which pretty much 
> eliminated me from hunting meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in making 
> petrographic slides, mostly of meteorites 
> (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to have thin sections made 
> contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
>
> I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
> petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.
>
> Steve Schoner
> IMCA 4470
>
> 
> US MD: "I Beg Americans To Throw Out This Veg Now"
> dr-pedre-md.com
> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3331/5cfbc095cf4b140954083st02duc
> __
>
> Visit our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and 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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Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-08 Thread John Lutzon via Meteorite-list


Hello Steve,

Yes, very nice to see you posting again. All Best!

John Lutzon

- Original Message - 
From: "Mike Tettenborn via Meteorite-list" 
To: "Steve Schoner" 
Cc: 
Sent: Saturday, June 08, 2019 5:22 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918


Steve,

Welcome back!  Glad you are still involved.   Has it been since 2003?  If I 
remember correctly it was a spider bite that sidelined 
you.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn

> On Jun 8, 2019, at 10:04 AM, Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list 
>  wrote:
>
> The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918
>
>  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
> this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor 
> shower, thought to be the source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  
> The Beta  Taurids are a daylight meteor shower 
> starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting throughout the day and 
> then below the horizon at the end of the day. 
> Though improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of 
> the Beta Taurid meteor stream?
>
>  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came from 
> the south west direction.  And I have yet to find 
> any observers that stated the direction from which it came.
>
>  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
> though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the 
> subject of much study even today as it has isotopes that relate to having 
> been close to the Sun, such as what one would expect of 
> the parent body of the Beta Taurids Comet Encke.  At the end of this 
> month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid meteor 
> stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has masses 
> large enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, 
> there certainly will be smaller masses that could produce meteorites such as 
> Richardton which fell on June 30th 1918.  In fact 
> any meteorite that fell on or around June 30th coming from the south west 
> direction should be further examined to see if they 
> have isotopic properties that one would expect having been close to the Sun.
>
> BTW:
> I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since 
> I became disabled in 2003, which pretty much 
> eliminated me from hunting meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in making 
> petrographic slides, mostly of meteorites 
> (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to have thin sections made 
> contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
>
> I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
> petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.
>
> Steve Schoner
> IMCA 4470
>
> 
> US MD: "I Beg Americans To Throw Out This Veg Now"
> dr-pedre-md.com
> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3331/5cfbc095cf4b140954083st02duc
> __
>
> Visit our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and 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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Re: [meteorite-list] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-08 Thread Mike Tettenborn via Meteorite-list
Steve,

Welcome back!  Glad you are still involved.   Has it been since 2003?  If I 
remember correctly it was a spider bite that sidelined you.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn

> On Jun 8, 2019, at 10:04 AM, Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list 
>  wrote:
> 
> The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918 
> 
>  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
> this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor shower, thought to be 
> the source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  The Beta  Taurids are a 
> daylight meteor shower starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting 
> throughout the day and then below the horizon at the end of the day.  Though 
> improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of the Beta 
> Taurid meteor stream? 
> 
>  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came from 
> the south west direction.  And I have yet to find any observers that stated 
> the direction from which it came.
> 
>  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
> though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the subject of much study 
> even today as it has isotopes that relate to having been close to the Sun, 
> such as what one would expect of the parent body of the Beta Taurids 
> Comet Encke.  At the end of this month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid 
> meteor stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has 
> masses large enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, there certainly 
> will be smaller masses that could produce meteorites such as Richardton which 
> fell on June 30th 1918.  In fact any meteorite that fell on or around June 
> 30th coming from the south west direction should be further examined to see 
> if they have isotopic properties that one would expect having been close to 
> the Sun. 
> 
> BTW:
> I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since 
> I became disabled in 2003, which pretty much eliminated me from hunting 
> meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in making petrographic slides, 
> mostly of meteorites (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to 
> have thin sections made contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
> 
> I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
> petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.
> 
> Steve Schoner
> IMCA 4470
> 
> 
> US MD: "I Beg Americans To Throw Out This Veg Now"
> dr-pedre-md.com
> http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3331/5cfbc095cf4b140954083st02duc
> __
> 
> Visit our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/meteoritecentral and 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] Richardton Meteorite June 30th 1918

2019-06-08 Thread Steve Schoner via Meteorite-list
The Rickardton Meteorite fall of June 30th, 1918 

  The Richardton Meteorite of North Dakota fell at 9:48 PM, and I wonder if 
this fall could be related to the Beta Taurid meteor shower, thought to be the 
source for the Tunguska event of June 30th 1908.  The Beta  Taurids are a 
daylight meteor shower starting at sunrise here in the United States, lasting 
throughout the day and then below the horizon at the end of the day.  Though 
improbable, could it be that the Richardton Meteorite is a member of the Beta 
Taurid meteor stream? 

  Trajectory data on the Richardton meteorite could be telling if it came from 
the south west direction.  And I have yet to find any observers that stated the 
direction from which it came.

  The Richardon meteorite, of which I have samples is very friable and even 
though it fell a hundred and one years ago, it is the subject of much study 
even today as it has isotopes that relate to having been close to the Sun, such 
as what one would expect of the parent body of the Beta Taurids Comet 
Encke.  At the end of this month Earth will be in the Encke Beta Taurid meteor 
stream and astronomers will be studying it to determine if it has masses large 
enough to create a Tunguska event.  And if so, there certainly will be smaller 
masses that could produce meteorites such as Richardton which fell on June 30th 
1918.  In fact any meteorite that fell on or around June 30th coming from the 
south west direction should be further examined to see if they have isotopic 
properties that one would expect having been close to the Sun. 

BTW:
I have not been on the meteoritelist in some time...In fact many years since I 
became disabled in 2003, which pretty much eliminated me from hunting 
meteorites.  So, currently I am involved in making petrographic slides, mostly 
of meteorites (Petroslides.com).  If anyone on this list wishes to have thin 
sections made contact me at: s_scho...@msn.com .
 
I would like to transition from this antiquated mybluelight e-mail to my 
petroslides e-mail at the above e-mail address.

Steve Schoner
IMCA 4470


US MD: "I Beg Americans To Throw Out This Veg Now"
dr-pedre-md.com
http://thirdpartyoffers.netzero.net/TGL3331/5cfbc095cf4b140954083st02duc
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