Hello List, I am contemplating adding a shatter cone to my collection, but,
I know nothing about them! Can someone tell me what to look for when
shopping for a shatter cone? I am only getting one, so I want it to be the
right one! : )
Thanks, Tom
peregrineflier
IMCA #6168
I have always admired Blaine Reed's BEAVERHEAD Shatter cones that he has displayed in Tucson. But I must admit it is mostly because of the location as opposed to the appearance.
Randy
From: "Tom aka James Knudson" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [meteor
Hi Tom:
My personal opinion is that a shattercone should contain dozens of
well-defined linations that eminate from a single point, thus making a
cone shape. The best examples from the U.S., come from Kentland
(Indiana) and Sierra Madera (Texas) where they form in limestone rocks.
Limestone
Hello Tom, List, Scone Lovers
Usually the material for sale is cone sections, rarely symmetrical, with
or without other partial cones. There is usually one or more on eBlagh
Humbug.
Here is a great one and, if you can get a matched pair, you can have
all the impact fantasies you can handle.
Message -
From: E. L. Jones [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Tom aka James Knudson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, February 19, 2004 2:03 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] shatter cone help?(quazi-risque)
Hello Tom, List, Scone Lovers
Usually the material for sale is cone sections
5 matches
Mail list logo