Hello Steve,
here the well known story of Calcalong Creek (can be found on Rob Elliott's
page of Fernlea meteorites)
Calcalong Creek (Wiluna District,Western Australia) Lunar, impact melt
breccia
Found after 1960, recognised 1990:
Total known weight 19g
It's the only lunar meteorite to have a
- Original Message -
From: Michael
Cottingham
To: Michael Cottingham
Sent: Wednesday, January 15, 2003 8:13 AM
Subject: Barratta L3.8 SALE
Hello Everyone,
I have a Barratta, Australia SALE going
on at ebay...
Most have the BUY IT NOW feature and all
pieces
are STUNNING and
PLEASE SEE THIS:
http://www.alifyaa.com/meteorite/pln/
Sincerely
Mohamed H. Yousef
--
_
STOP MORE SPAM with the new MSN 8 and get 2 months FREE*
Peter Marmet wrote:
It's the only lunar meteorite to have a name instead of a number
Hello Steve, Peter and List!
Peter, you are not quite right ;-) There is another, albeit very
small one, the famous Hadley Rille, EH, recovered by Apollo 15
astronauts at Station 9, near Hadley Rille. This
Bernd and list:
Bench Crater Hadley Rille are not lunar meteorites. See the
only published paper on this subject, and a fine one at that!
Rubin A.E. and Grossman J. N., 1998, What is a meteorite? The pursuit of
a comprehensive definition. Meteorite!, v.4 no. 3, 24-25.
The adjective indicates
Dear M, M come, and List;
This was my thought as well. Nice quality pictures showed
quartz/feldspar-like matrix that reminded me of more terrestrial
materials. Knowing the history of sedimentary related materials from
this area kept me in this frame of thoughts.
I am not the final word, any
Hi Bernd and list,
Bernd, I completely agree what you wrote about the two elusive lunar
meteorites Hadley Rille and Bench Crater.
Recently I was looking through catalogs trying to find out which could be
the rarest meteorite a collector would dream to possess, rarest in terms of
just a few
Hello Zelmir and all,
Rare? How about Revelstoke? TKW ~1 gram; a CI1, and Canadian.
Go for it STEVE A. ;-)
Regards,
Frank
Now the question:
Whoever knows if there migh be somewhere hidden (in a museum, collection,
or just cited in the literature...) some even more rare meteorite, rare
being
Hello all
A rarest italian fall is the Piancaldoli meteorite, a
LL3 meteorite, after the fall only 3 pieces of
gr.7.55, 5.1 and 0.41 as found, but all probably is
lost, only a thin section in the Natural Museum of
Washington is available.
Regards
matteo
--- fcressy [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Well Steve.. the best I remember.. Robert Haag
found it in Australia near Calcalong Creek as he was collecting
Murchison. I think was Murchison). Anyway this one was different and
he had it analyzed. Voila calcalong. One of my very favorites pieces
because someone special thought of me. :-)
Hi Ron and list
The fact is that dinosaur fossils are not found at the k-T boundary. One has
to go 9-10 ft at best, below the boundary to find dinosaur bones in any of
the beds that contain dinosaur fossils. This represents a substantial period
of time prior to the impact layer. This is why it is
Hello all
I have put some Gao on ebay, 5 is indivduals with
orientation and flow lines, other is a lot of baby Gao
and fragments, if you want look here:
http:[EMAIL PROTECTED]/
Regards
Matteo
=
M come Meteorite - Matteo Chinellato
Via Triestina 126/A - 30030 - TESSERA, VENEZIA, ITALY
Hi List
I have a few smaller fragments, fairly common ending today if your
interested. Not rare at all, sorry.
Mark
http://cgi6.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewSellersOtherItemsuserid=refamatc
ompleted=0sort=3since=-1include=0page=1rows=25
__
I no understand what want this person from me You
no like the emails on the rarest meteorites?
Matteo
Note: forwarded message attached.
=
M come Meteorite - Matteo Chinellato
Via Triestina 126/A - 30030 - TESSERA, VENEZIA, ITALY
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sale Site:
I know very little about terrestrial geology (or any other, really ;-) but
it resembles altered granite, like a gneiss or (less so) a schist. Don't
have a lot of that out here to compare it to, though. Aside from cutting a
section of it, has any analysis been done on this rock? Does it pass
What would be the correct thing to call an impactor like Hadley Rille or
Bench Crater? I gather that 'meteorite' refers only to things that impact
Earth; how about things that hit other planets? Eventually we will find
more foreign bodies on other planets; may as well get the language
Hi Jeff!
Thanks for the guidelines for pronouncing Gujba - I suspect that the
NomCom picked the most unpronouncable name in the area!
And, of course, thanks for probably the most qualified person on the list to
advise me!
very best!
dave
IMCA #0092
Hi
How about a slice of Nogata?
very best
dave
__
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
Hi Tracy,
What would be the correct thing to call an impactor like Hadley Rille or
Bench Crater? I gather that 'meteorite' refers only to things that impact
Earth; how about things that hit other planets?
On this list I've seen the words lunaite and lunarite. I've always
assumed the former
Rock, Terrestrial, Desert Varnish, Probably Granite, Maybe Quartz looks like
the stuff the used to make curb stones out of in the good ol days.
Definitely not from out of this world and I am the least qualified on this
list to say so, but I know an Earth Rock when I see one.
Keep tryingby
I was just informed that a number of contrails were seen over Palm Beach, California
this morning (around 7AM Pacific time), and at least one air burst
was observed. Apparently it was all captured on video tape by a
local TV station, as they had a camera looking at a nearby mountain.
Anyone
I no understand what want this person from me
I got a similar email from him:
"NO MORE EMAIL."
All I can figure out, would be that he has missed the point of an email-list rather spectacularly.
Gregory
Hi Jeff and all,
In other words, if I correctly understand this, on another moon, asteroid or
airless planet, the part of a meteoroid that survives impact on another body
becomes a meteorite without an intervening meteor stage; (unless of
course, it may have previously grazed an atmosphere ala
Hi All,
An update on the STARSHINE 3 upcoming decay. The reentry window has
narrowed considerably in the last 24 hours. I'm now assuming it will
occur sometime between 20 January 15:00 UT and 21 January 21:00 UT.
This leaves only 6 passes that intersect the continental U.S. --
three ascending,
Good evening list. I just want to thank everyone who gave me info on the calcalong creek piece. It truly is a outstanding piece.How lucky bob haag was to find it.
steveSteve r. Arnold, Chicago, il, 60107
The midwest meteorite collector!
I.M.C.A. member #6728
Website url
Mohamed and Matteo,
It looks igneous to me...quartz or pyroxene crystals being the main mineral.
Black mineral maybe magnetite...or a amphibole or a mica.
Mohamed...question...does it attract to a strong magnet? If so, probably the
black is magnetite.
Regards,
John
- Original Message
Frank, etc.,
Nope. You didn't understand all of what I said. The first part is
right: we don't care if there was a meteor or whether the body doing the
accreting had no atmosphere. Once the impactor survives landing, it
becomes a meteorite. If it becomes incorporated into a rock as a
Mohamed,
Depending on the locale, it may be a sample of Troctolite or Trout Stone.
Found in just a few places, Poland, Scotland, Montana and Oklahoma, USA,
Harz/Germany.
From the Handbook of Rocks and Minerals Walter Schumann, he describes it to
wit:
Rare variety of gabbro with light colored
Dear Listees;
As you have recently seen on the list, there is always someone needing
more information on meteorwrong and meteorite identification. I have
just taken some of my meteorites (meager small things that they are) and
some of my beautifully classic meteorwrongs (massive magnetite, 3
David,
Sounds like a great way to get out the message. Like most of us, I have done
a little meteorite sharing with classrooms, co-workers, and scouts. I
always get the feeling that I'm one of just a few people that have a clue
about what meteorites are. While popular like never before, the
Greetings listees,
Speaking of which, I stumbled across this great website offering a bit
of education on meteorwrongs and meteorights. I thought some of you
might find some interest in it. If not, please hit the delete key now
and pretend this message never arrived. ;-)
Mark and list, Mark wrote;
Send me your address and I
will send you a couple small meteorites with surface crust
Things like this, make me proud to be on this list! Some of the nicest and
most generous people I have ever met are on this list! Thank you all!
Thanks, Tom
The proudest member of
Does anybody have any information on the Genuine meteorite
from Japan?It's not in my information. Just curious...
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItemitem=2153745214category=3239
John (:}
I always thought that if it was in space it was called a meteoroid. When it
hit the atmosphere , it was called a meteor. When it hit the ground, it was
called a meteorite.
Rosie
- Original Message -
From: Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, January 15,
Rhett, Dave, and Listees,
Who says lightning doesn't strike twice?
What really great ideas!
I'll support both in any way I can.
Rhett you can sign me up!
Dave, you wrote:
I spent forty-five minutes and have
a better looking and more functional display
than the traveling NASA display presently
In a message dated 1/15/2003 10:00:54 PM Mountain Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Speaking of which, I "stumbled" across this great website offering a bit
of education on meteorwrongs and meteorights. I thought some of you
might find some interest in it. If not, please hit the delete
Hi list,
As a newbie myself, I thought I'd contribute something substanial to answer a request for a less expensive book on iron meteorites. I found this book years ago for a quarterin K-mart book clearance bin. I bought two. Now I wish I bought a dozen. Don't let the lack of the word Meteorite in
37 matches
Mail list logo