-- Norm Lehrman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Steve,
Everything sounds fine till that last couple of
paragraphs where every other proposal also stumbles.
Just where is all this silicate material in our oceans
or atmosphere? I still see a mass balance problem.
I'm open for a good answer, but if y
-- Norm Lehrman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Steve,
Everything sounds fine till that last couple of
paragraphs where every other proposal also stumbles.
Just where is all this silicate material in our oceans
or atmosphere? I still see a mass balance problem.
I'm open for a good answer, but if
Dear Steve, Norm and List Members,
I posed a question to D. Futrell some 10 years ago
concerning comet formation of tektites. I asked him
if it was possible that a comet could have entered
Earth`s atmosphere and left behind glass from melted
silicates from both the comet and Earth entrained dus
Steve,
Everything sounds fine till that last couple of
paragraphs where every other proposal also stumbles.
Just where is all this silicate material in our oceans
or atmosphere? I still see a mass balance problem.
I'm open for a good answer, but if you just described
it, I didn't understand.
My theory on tektite formation:
Go back to the impacts of cometary material on Jupiter in July of 1994. I
think in this there is a clear demonstration of how tektites are formed. There
were huge plumes of plasma extending out into space, and large dark clouds of
re-condensed dust from the imp
ECTED]>
To: "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Steve Schoner"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2006 8:57 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Re: Meteorite-list Digest, Vol 26, Issue 30
Sterling,
I too got drawn into tektites by the mystery.
entral.com
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Re: Meteorite-list Digest, Vol 26, Issue 30
Sterling,
I too got drawn into tektites by the mystery. They
often tell their individual stories plainly, but we
still can't get the big picture out of them!
One comment on your comments though. Tektites
(a
its own, so it's DOA, just like all the
> other tektite theories.
> They're a paradox. They're a problem.
> They're like the jigsaw that seems to going
> so well until somebody holds up a piece
> you'd forgotten about and innocently says,
> "Where
lds up a piece
you'd forgotten about and innocently says,
"Where's this go?"
Sterling K. Webb
--
- Original Message -
From: "Steve Schoner" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Sunday, February 12, 2006 2:41 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Re: Meteorite-list D
As Sterling Webb wrote, if the reasoning he posited follows then there is no
way that tectites came from the moon. The distribution on the earth, the
ablation shapes, stretch forms, and lack of cosmic ray exposure pretty much
eliminate the moon as the source.
Steve Schoner
IMCA #4470
Date: S
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