In Roberl Woolard site its write this:
H7, Metallic Melt Breccia (Primitive Achondrite)
Its ok?
Matteo
--- Frank Cressy [EMAIL PROTECTED] ha scritto:
Matteo and all,
I believe it is now classified as a Metallic-melt
Meteorite Breccia.
Cheers,
Frank
M come Meteorite Meteorites
Anotherthe probably H7, Metallic Melt Breccia
(Primitive Achondrite) classification its for the
pieces with metal veins...but for the normaly portales
valley without any veins the classification its a H6?
The matrix its paired to a normaly ordinary chondrite.
Matteo
--- Frank Cressy [EMAIL
Obviously there is disagreement among scientists
on what to call PV. I personally see no reason
to call it type 7, a primitive achondrite, an
achondrite OR to coin a new term. If I take the
conclusions of the Ruzicka study as a given, that
you had H6 material near its peak metamorphic
Hello Matteo and List,
Matteo had written:
In Roberl Woolard site its write this:
H7, Metallic Melt Breccia (Primitive Achondrite)
Its ok?
Matteo
Just to make it perfectly clear, what I say on the
site, in context, is: (Capitalization and spacing
added here for emphasis):
http://www.psrd.hawaii.edu/Sept05/PortalesValley.html
Portales Valley: Not Just Another Ordinary Chondrite
Planetary Science Research Discoveries
September 30, 2005
--- A melted meteorite gives a snapshot of the heat and shock that
wracked an asteroid during the first stages of differentiation.
ok...in conclusion what new classification is portales
valley?
Matteo
--- Ron Baalke [EMAIL PROTECTED] ha
scritto:
http://www.psrd.hawaii.edu/Sept05/PortalesValley.html
Portales Valley: Not Just Another Ordinary Chondrite
Planetary Science Research Discoveries
September 30, 2005
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