For anyone interested, I manage to get a good photo through
the lens of my MBC-10 microscope of an LA OO1 Thin Section
in cross polarized light.
You can see it at:
http://community.webshots.com/album/323013090fxnqEN
Best wishes, Michael
--
"You and I do not see things as
Now that everyone is hopefully done filling thier taxes, I am holding a "Tax
Day Sale" to help those of you getting money back from Uncle Sam spend your
refund in the least amount of time possible ; ) Free priority mail shipping
on orders of $100 or more.
DAG 400 Lunar .124g ultra-thin part s
Hello list,
I noticed the other day that Pasamonte (b) has not been published in the
Meteoritical Bulliten. I have not researched the reason or even know if the
meteorite was ever submitted, however I thought I would put Gary Huss'
classification report of this meteorite on-line so it is refere
http://deepimpact.jpl.nasa.gov/mission/update.html
Deep Impact Mission Update - April 2005
Maura Rountree-Brown with information from Mike Sierchio, Deputy Mission
Manager
The Deep Impact mission team closed the Commission Phase of flight with
the completion of the impactor projectile's checkout
MARS ODYSSEY THEMIS IMAGES
April 11-15, 2005
o Holden Crater Dune Field (Released 11 April 2005)
http://themis.la.asu.edu/zoom-20050411a.html
o Sand Sheet on Crater Floor (Released 12 April 2005)
http://themis.la.asu.edu/zoom-20050412a.html
o Ganges Chasma Sand Sheet (Released 13 April 2005
John, Peter, Bernd and others:
What a twisted weave this has become. The picture in question was probably
taken by Jeff Rowell of a section of NWA 1648 (looks like John K's section
obviously). This one and I think two others were sent by Jeff when he was
showing me some of the pics he had of a
Tracy,
I was thinking John meant "Chi-town" to mean "Chicago"?
Best,
Dave
tracy latimer wrote:
Steve's latest purchase may be nonexistent. There is a thread up
right now on the Trust and Safety board about how the seller of the
"meteorite" from "the Andes" is yet another scammer, stealing auctio
On Fri, 15 Apr 2005 18:45:06 +, "tracy latimer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Steve's latest purchase may be nonexistent. There is a thread up right now
>on the Trust and Safety board about how the seller of the "meteorite" from
>"the Andes" is yet another scammer, stealing auctions and pictu
Hello List, for the fun of it, I put that slice with the barred chondrule on
ebay!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3239&item=6525920358&;
rd=1
Thanks, Tom
peregrineflier <><
http://www.frontiernet.net/~peregrineflier/Peregrineflier.htm
http://fstop.proboards24.com/
__
Steve's latest purchase may be nonexistent. There is a thread up right now
on the Trust and Safety board about how the seller of the "meteorite" from
"the Andes" is yet another scammer, stealing auctions and pictures to
fabricate their own. He may be lucky if he gets a rusted out tractor part
John D. wrote:
> NWA 1774 (R3.8-6)
John K. responded:
> That sure looks like the NWA 1648 Diogenite Polymict
> Breccia thin section I bought from Jeff Rowell last year.
Peter M. wrote:
> that's the SAME thin section, isn't it?!
Hello John D., John K., Peter and List,
If it is really an R3.8-
Hello List, I have the most exciting meteorite to ever come out of Morocco,
NWA 2691, a L5, S2, W2. Well to me it is, it is the first meteorite I had
classified.
It has a TKW of 53 grams, NAU kept the share, I am keeping the main mass,
a little cut loss, which leaves the rest of the world 18.2
Hey List, I am just trying to learn a little here. I do not have an
extinctive collection to compare meteorites. This slice is so plain, just
nothing to look at, but the matrix is odd, I have never seen a meteorite
quite like this, what can you tell me from the pictures?
Slice
http://img.photobuc
Hello John and list,
that's the SAME thin section, isn't it?!
Peter Marmet
"Kashuba, Ontario, California" schrieb:
> That sure looks like the NWA 1648 Diogenite Polymict Breccia thin section I
> bought from Jeff Rowell last year.
>
> http://www.johnkashuba.com/NWA%201648%20Diogenite%20-%20poly
That sure looks like the NWA 1648 Diogenite Polymict Breccia thin section I
bought from Jeff Rowell last year.
http://www.johnkashuba.com/NWA%201648%20Diogenite%20-%20polymict%20breccia
John Kashuba
Ontario, California
- Original Message -
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Friday, Apr
There is a minor correction to this text.
"The largest man-made nuclear explosion ...50
megatons".
Not true. In 1962 the old Soviet Union did a 100
megatonner in Nova Zemlya, I recall from my "duck and
cover" days.
Francis
--- Paul H <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Asteroid to pose close call i
Hi All,
Regarding Tom's question:
First, I suggest center-weighted or spot metering. Then...
Digital: set the white balance while holding the camera close but not shadowing
the surface of the slice. Then shoot at an EV+1.
Film: Overexpose by 1.5-2 F-stops.
The background makes little differen
Since feldspar is sometimes found in meteorites, I'm guessing plagioclase.
It's known for its distinctive striations.
Anita D. Westlake
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Darren
Garrison
Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2005 7:55 PM
To: Tom Knudso
http://www.spacerocksinc.com/April15.html
__
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
At 20.45 14/04/2005 -0700, you wrote:
>Hello List, I am having trouble taking photos of Ghubara with it's black
>matrix and all. I can't seem to get any detail. Any hints? I have two small,
>beautiful end cuts and a slice I want to list on ebay, but it is hard to do
>with out photos!
I would sugg
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