Hello Greg, Adam and All,

I was talking with John Horner, the famous dinosaur digger of Montana once about the 
naming of dinosaurs. He felt that the name should represent something about the beast 
rather than the one who found it. An example is instead of T. rex, which seems to me 
not much of a T. after all. He proposed the name Cretaceous rex since it was from that 
time period. Or a better example might be his Mayasaur where the name means "good 
mother lizard" (he can't do much about the saur=lizard part right now, but he did make 
note that the dinosaur cared for its young.

Therefore, I propose a new paradigm in naming meteorites, one where the name holds 
information other than that of the type specimen or human interaction. In this case 
the name I propose is Lowermantleite that indicates where it came from the parent body.

Otherwise, since it was a couple of NWAs that pushed the olivine-dios over the edge 
into a respectable working group, then NWAite should be the next o
bvious but boring and useless name.

Cheers,

Martin


















______________________________________________
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

Reply via email to