Well Mike, 

If I can add a measly 10% to the body of knowledge of this meteorite, by 
sacrificing one little stone (heck if I can help add 1/10 of 1%) I think that 
would be great. 

My guess is that a lot of these stones that are going into both institutional 
and private collections won't ever be broken up much less in a "non 
contaminated" way and they will sit as whole stones behind glass for thousands 
of years.  

Nothing wrong with that at all.  

I'm just saying that one might gather from your post below that you were 
implying in a self righteous manner that I might have done something horribly 
wrong by having one of these (already contaminated) meteorites sliced?  

Of course there are opportunity costs in any course of action one takes.  The 
slices I have now, while they are not useful anymore for SOME research and some 
examination purposes, they are however are VERY interesting (at least to me) in 
what they show.  I see things that quite frankly, I am not sure one can see 
from a broken fragment.

I am sure a thin section would show much of this better, but then of course, 
one would really be "destroying" a lot of material to get a thin section.  
(Look out Anne and E.T., there might be an IMCA violation in there somewhere 
toward you guys. - just kidding)

Anyway, I think any researcher who will want to purchase any of my slices will 
be quite aware of the research limitations that the cutting has placed on the 
slices.

But thanks for your concern Mike.

Steve Arnold
Host of Meteorite Men

Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry

-----Original Message-----
From: Michael Farmer <m...@meteoriteguy.com>
Date: Thu, 17 May 2012 10:06:51 
To: meteorh...@aol.com<meteorh...@aol.com>
Cc: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com<Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Sutter's Mill slices question, Impact Melt?

Steve, are you aware that slicing this meteorite is destroying 90% of the 
minerals and science value of it? It is an extremely rare meteorite and cutting 
does far more damage than breaking. 
We are having a 19 gram individual broken up in the UofA laboratory now  and 
cutting was absolutely ruled out
Due to the damage it would cause, even dry. While slice must be beautiful and I 
would love to see the pics, it should really not be done on this meteorite. FYI
Michael Farmer

Sent from my iPhone

On May 17, 2012, at 9:57 AM, meteorh...@aol.com wrote:

> Hey List,
> 
> I just got in some slices of Sutter's Mill.  
> 
> So I have a question, do carbonaceous chondrites ever have impact melt zones 
> in them?
> 
> Steve Arnold
> Host of Meteorite Men
> Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry
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