Doug,

I do admire you and would like to question you and the whole question of  
"natural" patina......
These guys have been floating out there for Billions of years and only when 
they arrive here
and burn to a crisp (which I personally love a bubbly black coating) do we call 
it natural.
When these metal chunks first formed and cooled they may have shined like a new 
coin.

This jelly or that coating will all introduce "stuff" on and into said object. 
I agrre with you
as far as cleaning and then acetone (to, again, de-grease). After that, the 
most natural way
to darken and protect iron is the hundreds of years old method of forming iron 
oxide and
boiling. This process leaves no chemicals on the object. The most difficult 
part of doing
this process is the cleaning and de-greasing---after that just put a small 
amount or reagent
in the bottom of household food container, hang the meteorite and wait about 8 
hours (varies),
take out and put in a pot of boiling water. The red/brown iron oxide somehow 
turns black
and when brushed off leaves a protective dark finish. Simple. Every blued gun 
you've ever seen
has had this oxidation method applied and after hundreds of years some of them 
look pritine.

As I do not know if this process will work on an iron such as Campo, I 
(although in a wheelchair)
have decided to try this method on one of my smaller 5.45Kg individuals. 
Although i'm more
than happy with its present apperance, which can be seen here, i'll give it a 
go.
http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=2639
As there were no comments on my original post, i'll do it and get back with the 
results, pics.

All best to all, John



----- Original Message ----- 
From: "MexicoDoug via Meteorite-list" <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
To: <coj...@tiscali.it>; <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2016 9:49 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] R: iron meteorite natural color


Hi Francisco, My opinion is no, about "naval jelly" for the reasons I discussed 
in my last post somewhere below.  But if you want 
to do that yourself, you can make a gel out of phosphoric acid, about 12-20% 
(w/w).  Gel is made with addition of a food gum starch 
like when you make Italian gelato.  It will stain darker for reaction with the 
acid. (instead of oxide you get phosphate).  Here is 
an example:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iron_pillar_of_Delhi#/media/File:QtubIronPillar.JPG
However leaving harsh acid is not my idea then it penetrates the meteorite like 
Muonion.

Regarding your question to me, I did not misunderstand, I think.  You simply do 
not want the true matte gray color of the clean 
metal after you remove the oxidation.  And you are clear now that you do not 
want to fake a natural color, you just want to change 
the color to look more "natural" :-).  (Then everyone will see this color and 
believe it is natural unless you tell them 
differently.)

This Campo is old buried microscopically fractured metal piece if you read near 
the bottom I recommended the process, assuming 
first you had sandblasted and treated as you indicated you would:

"The simplest things are: degrease with acetone if you are serious, then dry 
gentle heat a few hours followed by a good oil and you 
will build up a light protective oxidation layer. If you use any of the 
aggressive chemicals you have mentioned after cleaning you 
will reintroduce them.  This is not a smooth surface you can just wipe them 
off. The get sucked in.

Finally upon removing from the oven you can instead soak them like hot potatoes 
in hot paraffin or other of these microcrystalline 
waxes and oils.  Hot, so it is absorbed into all those crevices that have been 
created by you removing the oxides and nature's 
ambient forces beating the buried meteorite. Then a little of the oil when all 
is cooled every now and then wont's hurt on the 
surface and is the easiest way to keep things in check."

OK, now you change the question to ask to me and others:
"It's possible to convert nude grey to nude black? Without using oil or waxes?
Or it's better to use a different process for remove rust?

To that my thought is you must experiment under your conditions with oven *heat 
alone* after treatment.  Use with different oven 
times and temperatures until you see what tones you can achieve.  The heat will 
create some of these darkening effects, 
re-oxidizing the fresh surface in a controlled way which I think is what you 
are asking to do since you don't want coatings.  The 
purpose of the wax or oil is to stabilize the interior, not to color the 
surface, so this is independent of your surface staining.. 
A side effect of oil is that dark fresh, chloride free rust is taken up in the 
oil and smuges (colors) the surface darker, the more 
you rub...with gloves.

You ask about no use of oil, but consider your severely rusted original 
meteorite is porous after the thousands of years 
terrestrialized somewhat, so any exterior coating will not protect the 
interior.  Oil is principally for that purpose, to close any 
pores and keep the interior cleaned, IMO, no matter how you destructively stain 
your native metal that has been revealed after 
cleaning.

Better yet, buy a more solid meteorite like Gibeon or Seymchan and give it a 
light brushing like your links.  Some of those links 
are beautiful and solid.  They are not so prone to rust because they are like 
solid metal parts - not porous.  The underlying metal 
is good sh*t!  Just like buying good new tools, properly hardened, not some 
junk from cheap factory using inferior or degraded 
quality base metal.

Or maybe rub a little microfine graphite lubrication particles into the oil 
until you get the favorite shade of black.  It is 
easily removed, including on fingers LOL (I never did that but it might be 
interesting)

Maybe others who are more practiced in this can help but this is the best I can 
say.  Best of luck!
Doug

-----Original Message-----
From: Francesco Moser <coj...@tiscali.it>
To: 'MexicoDoug' <mexicod...@aol.com>
Sent: Mon, Nov 28, 2016 9:51 am
Subject: R: iron meteorite natural color

Hello Doug!
Thanks a lot for your kind and long reply!

I think I was misunderstood due to my poor English.
Let me try to explain what I mean and what I want to reach as result, I use 
some pictures as example so maybe I can explain what I 
have in my mind at best.
I don't want to put paint on the meteorite, absolutely no!

A fresh fall iron meteorite is gray/bluish, like this fresh fall:
http://www.marmet-meteorites.com/sitebuildercontent/sitebuilderpictures/.pond/alihmani.jpg.w560h747.jpg
Some Sikhote-Alin hold the original dark/bluish fusion crust in the deepest 
regmaglypts.
I don't want to replicate this!

If the meteorite fall in a desert there will be on the surface a desert varnish 
patina, like this Gibeon and Taza:
http://megameteorite.com/img/meteoriti/famose/ferrose/gibeon_728.9.jpg
http://www.polandmet.com/_taza/002.htm
That's an amazing surface! I like it so much and I consider really natural.
I don't want to replicate this!

A deep buried meteorite like Muonionalusta have a thick layer of oxide, rock 
and soil cemented with rust and something else.
Like this:
http://thumbs.picclick.com/00/s/MTIyNlgxNjAw/z/R9QAAOSw44BYKadV/$/Iron-meteorite-Muonionalusta-complete-piece-Sweden-1370-grams-_57.jpg
This meteorite of course is natural, it is in as found condition!
Sorry but I don't really like this surface looking.

If I deep clean and blast sanding a meteorite like this I will obtain a nude 
grey iron meteorite.
Something like this Dronino:
http://thumbs.picclick.com/00/s/OTc2WDE2MDA=/z/vZYAAOSwmfhX5vTW/$/172-gram-DRONINO-METEORITE-specimen-from-RUSSIA-_57.jpg
For me this looking is too artificial and I don't like it.
I can reach this results, I have done this job some time on Muonio before 
cutting slices.

So ... as found condition is "too natural" and "nude grey iron" is too 
artificial!
This is in my opinion a good half way:
http://www.polandmet.com/_morasko/003.htm
Nude black iron!!!
This is what I mean in my first mail and premise
"As we know an iron meteorite, such like Campo del Cielo for example, have a 
black surface."
All the Campo I found on the market have this type of "black" surface:
http://www.katiepaterson.org/meteorite/katie_paterson_meteorite_giorgia_polizzi_120711_6695.jpg

This is what I want!!!

So .. how can I deeply remove rust and preserve this nude black iron surface?
I'm planning to use sand blasting for remove the rust, but with this process I 
will obtain a "nude grey iron"
It's possible to convert nude grey to nude black? Without using oil or waxes?
Or it's better to use a different process for remove rust?


I hope you can understand what I mean :)

Thanks

<x>x<x>x<x>
Francesco


-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: MexicoDoug [mailto:mexicod...@aol.com]
Inviato: sabato 26 novembre 2016 22:46
A: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Oggetto: Re: iron meteorite natural color

Ciao Francisco

I'll try to give you a little more insight on your questions from my point of 
view and then write about what is practical to do. 
It is important to stress "point of view" because in the end you will probably 
do with your meteorites whatever makes you happiest, 
which clearly the impulse at this point is a jet black cosmetic preference of 
smooth black  which I do not like when it is a 
synthetic laboratory process.

First, you initially you asked:

"As we know an iron meteorite, such like Campo del Cielo for example, have a 
black surface. I have here a deeply rusted Campo, I'm 
planning to remove rust with a sand blasting process. But with this I will 
obtain a grayish surface, like naked iron, the same 
color of a slice."

This is *not* "as we know".  I do not know of Campo meteorites being recovered 
with black surfaces, do you or anybody else know 
this?  I never personally had the good fortune to recover a Campo myself so it 
it my assumption.  I have recovered other iron 
meteorites.  All are light or dark orange rust color except one locality that 
actually was naturally weathered to black.

So I feel your original premise of "as we know ... Campo ... black" is a false 
premise.   Is it based on a mixed series of 
assumptions maybe due to equating space, mystery, adrenaline, and night to 
blackness, seeing some naturally blackened weathered 
meteorites, imagining a stony meteorite fresh crust for your iron, and maybe 
never seeing a freshly fallen iron meteorite that has 
not be cleaned and altered its surface by sellers for markets such as jewelry 
where a concept is being marketed and not what is 
"natural"?

Rubbing mineral or other appropriate oil and if you are serious like hinted by 
Marcin, dry, quite gentle oven heat will darken the 
metal, the later also mentioned by Marcin.

The initial fall fresh probably had a blue-gray color, like metal heated in a 
furnace.  It is somewhat darker but the coloring is 
the fusion crust.  Your Campo has lost its fusion crust a long time ago.  If 
you have an uncrusted ordinary chondrite fragment 
would you also want to treat the matrix surface to turn it black?  No!  What 
you have exposed it the interior, in its natural 
color.  Now you want to make it dark.

OK, so you work so hard to removed all the oxides/rusts and chlorides, and now 
you want to treat it to return them.  Only this time 
you want to do it in a controlled fashion to fake the look of natural 
weathering.

Let us look what nature does.  If it is fresh and dry, it can blacken and leave 
intact real fusion crust.  Most likely though, it 
will fall in a humid environment and rust orange and form some surface scale or 
shale.  Sometimes you can get a tough rather 
orange, near black, coating like Gibeons can appear on the market.  But let's 
instead think of natural.

WHAT IS NATURAL?  (asks Pilate!) Natural is a very gradual and slow process in 
which oxidation takes place, perhaps not too deeply 
as to preserve smooth fusion crust in many finds and falls.  It requires many 
many cycles of: oxidize lightly, oxidize uniformly, 
clean (perhaps by wind abrasion and washed by distilled rain, even acid rain is 
effective.

Now you want to falsely reproduce that process on the matrix of a long rusted 
meteorite that has been pickled in aggressive caustic 
chemicals.  That's gross!  It is like skinning off the hide of an animal and 
then coloring its remaining carcass the color of fur 
for display instead of the natural colors of the muscles, fats and organs.

OK, but you still want to do it and don't agree with me.  There are more 
problems.  The naturally colored meteorites that are black 
or orange and have little to no scaling and original layers of fusion crust at 
the least alpha-2 layer, may be significantly 
impervious to seepage, but your Campo has already developed cracks, faults 
internal cavities from rot that was removed, due to 
thousands of years un soil and rain, powerful roots, expansion and contraction 
by temperature changes, and general oxidative 
terrestrial processes, solubilization of corrosive catalysts you.ve removed, 
you hope.

My point is you can color it however you want, but the fake coloring will be 
misleading, it will not have inside a 
weathering-naturally stabilized meteorite and its internals due to their porous 
and fissured nature will not be as represented. 
The more you do to an iron to make a faux patina, possibly the more you will 
need to work to redo regularly.  The more it is 
handled the more contaminants will get into it from sweat, etc.  And!!!  to 
make that false patina fool those to think it closer to 
natural, you must dig into the surface of your material and oxidize it in a 
controlled manner, further weathering the piece of 
bright matrix you cut (not with a saw but with chemicals).

The simplest things are: degrease with acetone if you are serious, then dry 
gentle heat a few hours followed by a good oil and you 
will build up a light protective oxidation layer. If you use any of the 
aggressive chemicals you have mentioned after cleaning you 
will reintroduce them.  This is not a smooth surface you can just wipe them 
off. The get sucked in.

Finally upon removing from the oven you can instead soak them like hot potatoes 
in hot paraffin or other of these microcrystalline 
waxes and oils.  Hot, so it is absorbed into all those crevices that have been 
created by you removing the oxides and nature's 
ambient forces beating the buried meteorite. The a little of the oil when all 
is cooled every now and then wont's hurt on the 
surface and is the easiest way to keep things in check.

Hope that helps more!  I apologize for my point of view but it is based on my 
idea of what a meteorite "should look like" which is 
an emotional concept and I agree here that this is only my personal opinion, 
authentically conserving whatever characteristics of 
the locality possible, and balancing that with preventing rampant oxidation.  
It is like cleaning coins.  The only thin worse than 
a cleaned coin is one that has been cleaned and then colored in some way to hid 
the fact it was cleaned, usually to sell for more 
as a coin that never was cleaned will fetch from  buyers.

Other options besides paint, are VCI systems to preserve professionally used by 
some hard core collectors, and electroplating 
metals used for jewelry ...  You can even try silver which will be initially 
bright but will soon turn very black!

My best,
Doug
(Feeling like H.H.Nininger now when he bellyached about people etching iron 
meteorites with a border of shellac on the slices to 
leave a very "unnatural" etch of the slice.  He felt this would be detrimental 
to people understanding what a meteorite truly 
looked like and do a disservice to meteoritics.  Notwithstanding, this practice 
had become popular amount some nowadays as ol' H.H. 
rolls over...)


-----Original Message-----
From: Francesco Moser via Meteorite-list <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
To: Meteorite-list <Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Sat, Nov 26, 2016 11:20 am
Subject: [meteorite-list] R:  iron meteorite natural color

Marcin and Doug!
Thanks for your replys!

Ok, I understand what you mean about the authenticity of color.
For sure the desert varnish of some iron meteorite like Gibeon or Henbury is 
the most natural looking for a find (not fall) 
meteorite.
But old and buried meteorite like Muonionalusta or Campo have a very thick rust 
and oxide crust, I suppose no one want to have that 
on his irons.
So after remove and clean all the rust shale what remains? Grey nude iron ... 
it is absolutely not natural!!!
So for me on this type of meteorite the black surface is something better that 
the nude iron, isn't?
Of course I don't want to paint the meteorite, just convert the nude grey iron 
to dark.
How it is possible? With oil?

All the Campo that are on the market have nude dark iron on the surface, how 
can I reach the same looking starting from nude grey 
iron results of sand blasting?

Thanks


Ciao

<x>x<x>x<x>
Francesco


-----Messaggio originale-----
Da: Meteorite-list [mailto:meteorite-list-boun...@meteoritecentral.com] Per 
conto di Marcin Cimala - POLANDMET via Meteorite-list
Inviato: giovedì 24 novembre 2016 23:42
A: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Oggetto: Re: [meteorite-list] iron meteorite natural color

> Hello,
> I have a question.
> As we know an iron meteorite, such like Campo del Cielo for example,
> have a black surface.
> I have here a deeply rusted Campo, I'm planning to remove rust with a
> sand blasting process.
> But with this I will obtain a greysh surface, like naked iron, the
> same color of a slice.
> Not really a natural color for the exterior of an iron meteorite and
> also not aestetically pretty, looks too artificial for me.
> There is something to do for restore the original black color?
> Or it's better to remove the rust with a traditional steel brush,
> maybe with a drill ???
>
> Tips for mechanical or chemical process are welkomme!!!
> I can try with the classical NaOh bath, I have also Phosphoric, Citric
> and Oxalic acid :)
>
> Thanks
> <x>x<x>x<x>
> Francesco

Hah good question Francesco. But what is natural color of meteorite at all ?

Desert sandblasted NWA is not a real looking meteorite? Should I paint them 
black to be looking like a real meteorites ? Poor 
Dhofars....
This is what Im fighting long time. Strange stereotype that meteorite MUST BE 
BLACK outside, WHY ?

When You like Your girlfrend ? When he smile to You with his pretty face or 
when she put ton of Max Factor chemicals on it??

I have always strange taste, different than most of collectors. For me, if 
specimen have crust must be black or black with rusty 
patina. If meteorite have no more crust like Campo, why to "paint" it to black 
to looks like Sikhote ? Then You will see paint, not 
Your meteorite. I only can imagine what strange things they do to clean Campo 
and look it like that. LOL

OK now a few tips.
As I understand Your Campo is a complete specimen ? To remove deep rust You 
must use electrochemical cleaning + brush + small 
hammer. Then You will get mostly cleaned meteorite with BLACK remains of rust 
that will make Your meteorite looks REAL.Then heat it 
and put alot of oil to make it looks fresh and oriented :)

-----[ MARCIN CIMALA ]----[ +48 793567667 ]----- http://www.Meteoryty.pl  
marcin(at)meteoryty.pl
http://www.PolandMET.com       marcin(at)polandmet.com
--------[ Member of Polish Meteoritical Society ]--------



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