Hi Sonny and List,
> Have you ever wondered how many hours you must spend before your
> first cold find ? Or how many hours after you find a new area
> with a new meteorite before your next find?
Great subject! When I first started cold meteorite hunting in
September 1999, there was very little
Hello list,
I have recently communicated with Michael Lambert, son of Hugh Henry John
Lambert, who wrote "The Monze Meteorite" published in The Northern Rhodesia
Journal, Volume I - No. 4 - 1951.
You may have seen my Monze webpage, or remember when Doug kindly posted it.
It quotes, , severa
Thank you Jim-Paul for the new MeteoriteTimes issue.
Not to be out done I updated the Falls-Calendar on my website, Did you know
that Gao is 46 years Earth-years old today? And Bruderheim turned 46
yesterday, only one day older.
While I was at it I also updated the Catalog, and removed all
http://www.guardian.co.uk/space/article/0,,1723936,00.html
Red rain could prove that aliens have landed
Amelia Gentleman and Robin McKie
The Observer (United Kingdom)
March 5, 2006
There is a small bottle containing a red fluid on a shelf in Sheffield
University's microbiology laboratory. The li
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0603/03dawn/
Probe built to visit asteroids killed in budget snarl
BY STEPHEN CLARK
SPACEFLIGHT NOW
March 3, 2006
A robotic mission to study two of the solar system's largest asteroids
has been killed by NASA after months of uncertainty while extensive
reviews
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2087-2070393,00.html
Comet dust holds building blocks of life
Jonathan Leake
The Sunday Times (United Kingdom)
March 5, 2006
SCIENTISTS examining the first dust samples collected from a comet have
found complex carbon molecules, supporting the theory that
Sonny & list,
My stats are not going to be what people want to hear.
I have been collecting rocks, fossils, and artifacts
since I could walk. I have been a continuously active
exploration geologist for 35 years. I have been
looking at the ground in front of me with something of
a trained eye fo
March 3, 2006
Dwayne Brown/Merrilee Fellows
Headquarters, Washington
(202) 358-1726/ (818) 393-0754
Guy Webster
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
(818) 354-6278
MEDIA ADVISORY: 06-037
NASA ANNOUNCES MARS RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER COVERAGE
NASA's Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter begins th
--Since The Tucson Gem & Mineral Show is the most
--significant single event yearly influencing the meteorite
--market, as usual, I will devote the March article to
--reporting on same.
I was very disappointed that Michael Bloods always entertaining, and usually
informative column gave a report
Hey all,
I must say I got one of the astronauts and slices of Dho 1180 from
Robert a while back. It was great that he and his wife Terry decided at
the last minute to attend the Tucson show. He was able to deliver the
lunar to me in person, so it felt like my "show" specimen! I'm really
pl
Greetings Everyone,
MeteoriteTimes for March is now up.
- Thank you to all the writers! Another month of great articles!
- Mark's article will be a little late and we'll make another post when it up.
- Martin's Meteorite Sign project has really taken off. Now 75 signs in
the Gallery.
http:/
Hi Sterling and list.
I have a couple of Muong Nong and they have small brown stones stuck in
them, I don't imagine this to be a rare thing in these particular tektites,
as I have 2 specimens, both have rock inclusions.
Would these inclusions not lend a hand in identifying, either where they
Hi!
If we made Norm ("Mr. Tektite") think
because of our babble, then we did a good
job. Does moving out 100,000 tektites mean
that you can move from the pup tent in the
back yard and get back into the house, Norm?
A few loose ends...
Doug, the actual language Kroeberl uses
is that the
Hello
auctions go to ended, for who want look here:
http://members.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewUserPage&userid=mcomemeteorite
Matteo
M come Meteorite - Matteo Chinellato
Via Triestina 126/A - 30030 - TESSERA, VENEZIA, ITALY
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sale Site: http://www.mcomemeteorite.it
Hello folks, the proposal request form failed so here it is via standard
email.
I have also made a windows media movie of the anomaly in three wavelengths,
as well as a LASCO C3 clip that shows the largest of the cometary fragments
on its death dive. I believe there may be as many as 4 fragm
Look at this guys new Texas meteorites.
Ruben
http://cgi.ebay.com/METEORITE-from-TEXAS-CRATER-BLAST-23-5-GRAMS_W0QQitemZ6610939394QQcategoryZ3239QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem
__
Do You Yahoo!?
Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam
Chris
I dare say you are right about it being a biased
formula and the data set we had to work with was very
limited as you point out. Thoroughly documented falls
leading to strewn fields of known dimensions may even
have been less than 5 at the time but memory isn't
that great after these years.
Hi All,
Have you ever wondered how many hours you must spend before your first
cold find ? Or how many hours after you find a new area with a new
meteorite before your next find?
I would like to say that you will find a meteorite every 40- 50 hours
of searching for cold finds not counting dr
On Sun, 5 Mar 2006 08:08:49 -0800 (PST), you wrote:
>thumbprinting.So who says a major movie can't have meteorites in it?By the
Okay, I give up. Who says that?
__
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/m
I have a 32.9 gr. end piece with crust of Kendleton
buy years ago from the collection of Guy Heinen, after
this I not have seen other pieces similar...
Matteo
--- "Dr. Svend Buhl" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
ha scritto:
> Hello everybody,
>
> just wanted to let you know that I'am in the market
> for a
Hi Rob-
I think your methodology probably resulted in a biased formula. Falls
connected with witnessed fireballs are strongly associated with shallow
entry paths. Shallow paths produce multiple fragmentation events, or single
fragmentation events that extend over a long ground path. This resul
I know a formula does exist for this because I did my
3rd year undergraduate project on exactly this and I
and another student wrote it.
It involved a lot of empirical evidence and
formulating a formula which fitted the very few
properly observed falls and seeing if it could be
extrapolated to ot
Check my website, I have one very nice piece of Kendleton left.
Mike Farmer
http://www.meteoritehunter.com/
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Dr. Svend
Buhl
Sent: Sunday, March 05, 2006 9:07 AM
To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Subject
Hello again list.My wife and I went to go see 2 movies yesterday.One of
them was EIGHT BELOW.The major theme is about the 8 dogs that get
rescued.But one of the underlying themes is a scientist comes all the way
from australia looking for meteorites in the antartic.He has come down to
find the firs
Hello everybody,
just wanted to let you know that I'am in the market for a moderately priced
piece of the Kendleton L4 meteorite. Specimen should be a slice, partslice
or prefferedly an endcut but should not exceed 5 mm in thickness.
Thanks for any offers in advance.
best regards
Svend
www.n
Chris,
Thanks for the detailed reply.
What about a listing of strenfield dimensions sorted by type of stone?
Thanks.
Stan
From: "Chris Peterson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] strewnfield size vs entry angle
Date: Sun, 5 Mar 2006 08:39:55 -0700
MIME-Version: 1.0
Receive
Good morning list.All good things have got to come to an end.I have a
little over 1 kilo of CANYON DIABLO forsale.No trading!.40 cents a gram
for the whole kilo plus.If interested,I will break it down for you.Also
since there are no takers for the gibeon,$375 takes it home.Paypal only
for these ite
It would be difficult to compile such a list. Where a meteorite results from
an object that experiences a single fragmentation event (which presumably
describes most cases), the strewn field is not strongly related to the entry
details, but is instead defined by the wind conditions at the time.
I'm sure the data I'm looking for doesnt exist in a handy format anywhere,
but I figured I'd ask the smart people of the meteorite list incase it does.
does any one know of a handy tabular collection of data on meteoriod entry
angle vs strewnfield ellipse dimensions for various types of stone
m
Sterling:
Hello, as I told Tracy in a direct email, I was better in science than
history. In reading the accounts of the 1859 aurora, it's amazing that
knowing it happened has been ignored by communications and power companies.
It would be devastating if (when) it happens again. Tracy, tha
Sterling:
Sounds good to me (though I study big rocks that you can see with a
telescope). It sounds like it is time for me to start reading up on tektites
too!
As a novice, would you basically say that tektites come from volatilized
material that has recondensed while an impactite derives from
Hi Tracy and list, I certainly had fun looking at the data I did find. I had
more relevant info turn up with my first search string than my second,
results below.
All the best and good luck to your librarian friend. Kevin Forbes. VK3UKF.
Google search string "1859 aurora"
Extensive data
http
Gee, Doug,
For once, I am not creating a crackers theory of my own.
I am merely explaining how a certain geochemical test procedure
works. Not being a geo- or a cosmo- chemist, I am taking the
word of Matthies, D. and Kroeberl, C., Fluorine and Boron
Geochemistry of Tektites, Impact Glasses, a
Hi list...
I posted a similar request directly to three list members last Monday,
but only one has gotten back to me so far (thanks Dean!). I'm a
secondary school Science teacher in the UK. I've been asked to plan a
day of space related activities for a small group of our 'gifted and
talented
Sterling W. writes:
<< I don't know the values for the Nubia Sandstone,
but the range of sandstones is fluorine 180 to 450
ppm and boron about 10 to 85 ppm. The figures
for LDG is fluorine 7 ppm and boron 7 ppm, so
you see how the ratios shift as the content drops.
As the temperature rises (m
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