Blaine Reed Meteorites
P.O. Box 1141, Delta, CO 81416
Ph/fax (970) 874-1487
[email protected]

Dear Collectors

It has been a long time since I sent out an offering. Part of this is because I 
have been so tied up this spring/ summer (soon to be fall) with many other 
things. Part of it is that I simply have not had new things to offer. The few 
new things I have gotten this summer have quickly sold to people simply calling 
and asking about/ for new/ different things. There has not been a lot of this 
BUT it has been more than enough to soak up the things I had planned on putting 
on offerings like this. The things being offered here I had planned on debuting 
at the Denver Show. I suspect that I would have already sold most of these if I 
had NOT set them aside for this purpose.

DENVER INFO:
Yep, that show is coming soon, too soon for me, frankly. I have lots of prep 
work that needs doing and a completely NEW venue I have to figure out how to 
fit in (and that will require new tables and equipment from what I am seeing). 
YES, we are in yet another NEW/DIFFERENT place for this show once again. This 
new spot, hopefully, will be long term and is certainly easier to reach from 
the other shows than we were last year. This new location is Delta Hotel, 
Denver Thornton. This is located on the South East corner of the intersection 
of I-25 and 120th (actually, it is in back behind the shopping center on that 
corner). I will be in room 114 (yes, a hotel room once more, unfortunately. I 
will not be able to have the open, inviting space where people could hang out I 
had in the last two show locations. No such space was available in this new 
distinctly smaller venue so back to a room for me. At least I was able to have 
a ground floor room). I want to be open the afternoon of September 4th (the 
show is having a “soft opening” then) but I question my ability to get things 
set up by then. This new spot is NOT so easy to work with like my last new spot 
was (the space I had last year was fantastic for easy set up). So, I suspect it 
will take a considerable amount more time to jig-saw things into the room 
nicely. At worst, I plan to be open by 10am Friday (September 5th). I will try 
to be open a bit earlier (9am?) on other mornings of the show. I will stay open 
until 9, 9:30, 10pm most nights (visitors depending. No people around at all, 
then maybe call it a night earlier). The show runs through Saturday September 
13th. Barring any plagues, big health crisis, national emergencies, war, what 
have you, I plan to stay through the end (some people are closing up earlier to 
either set up at or visit one of the other shows that only runs the last few 
days of this time period). I’ll send out more “show announcements” if any of 
this changes for any reason.

https://blaine-reed-meteorites.blogspot.com/2025/08/blaine-reed-meteorites-list-281.html

AUSTRALITE BUTTONS
Well, nice partial buttons anyway. These both have nice complete cores (that 
show strong pressure waves on their leading rounded face) and differing amounts 
of the flange left surrounding it. I bought these in Tucson and then forgot I 
had them. They had gotten put kind of where they belonged- with Australites. I 
re-discovered them while packing things up for the Creede show a couple weeks 
ago (I bring some Australites there). I got them from a guy that had a fairly 
good assortment of Australites. Most of his were exactly like the ones I 
already have (cores, no flange). Some of them were fairly large (but not larger 
than ones I already have) and he had a pretty large price on them. I was able 
to finally convince him to sell me just the buttons after showing him that I 
had plenty like the others (and at a price cheaper than he was asking for his) 
and I was NOT going to buy the entire lot. Anyway, I ended up with 3 pieces 
(one I am keeping for the time being – it is very similar to the large one 
offered here). He said that these came out of a museum –The South Australian 
Museum in Adelaide I believe. Stupid me didn’t write it down believing that I 
would remember (and then managed to forget that I even had the things). The 
smaller piece does still have its museum number painted on it (looks like 
1202). The larger piece has been repaired. I am just happy that whomever found 
the pieces was smart enough to keep them together and then put them back 
together later (likely a museum worker). The smaller piece has about ½ of its 
flange intact (in two segments across the core from each other). The lager 
piece is closer to ¾ intact. Nice pieces. Not cheap, but then, given the fact 
that the two “complete” buttons I have been offered in the past couple years 
(they were labeled “complete” but I never got to see how complete they really 
where) were $4500 for one and $5000 on the other has me thinking that these are 
actually not unreasonably priced.
a) 3.12g button. ½ flange intact – 20mm x 15mm x 9mm - $700
b) 5.69g button. ¾ flange intact – 23mm x 20mm x 12mm - $1100

SAN ANGELO, Texas: Iron. Medium octahedrite (IIIAB). Found 1897. Tkw = 88kg.
This is yet another piece I got in Tucson and then forgot about. I 
re-discovered this one with some Sericho individuals I needed to cut in half 
for Denver. I had set it aside as it had a thin skin of rust browning over 
substantial parts of it (it had been in a humid climate and didn’t look to have 
a protective coating of any kind on it) so I set it aside in the pile of “needs 
work” things (that pile can get pretty big at times). I went ahead and simply 
cleaned the rust off (with the rust removal kit I got from Bill Mason years 
ago). I thought about sanding the thing down, re-etching and such but decided 
to leave this as is as much as possible. Part of this is because I, frankly, 
suck at etching and part of it is that this does look to be something of a 
historic specimen at some levels. This has an old (really old) label with it 
that shows it was once part of the Illinois State University collection. The 
guy I got it from had it and a few other more common things that they were 
parting with to get some fancier, rarer things for actual display for their 
collection. I can understand this. This piece likely just lived in a drawer in 
a back room there. This is certainly NOT a visually exciting piece. It is 
basically a square cut specimen (with one edge natural) and the etch does not 
show well (this is likely from one of the more heated/ shocked areas of the 
meteorite that was noted in research work done on it). Regardless, I suspect 
that this is a very hard to get meteorite. I can only recall ever having an 
ugly little bar with a bunch of holes drilled in it (iron research work in the 
early days generally used those drilling shavings from such holes) that was 
maybe 12 or 15 grams in my entire past. The notes on this (in Buchwald’s Iron 
Meteorites) say that Ward’s Scientific Establishment bought the bulk of the 
piece after it was found. The label that came with this says “Donor: Wards 
Nat’l Science Establ”.
123.0 gram part slice – 50mm x 47mm x 5mm - $1200.

SILVERTON, Texas: Ordinary chondrite (H4). Found 1938. Tkw = 14.16kg.
These are pieces that I did get fairly recently. Getting them brought back a 
lot of memories. This was one of my first “field recovery” meteorites (where 
I’d spend a couple weeks in an area, knocking on doors, handing out fliers, 
talking with people to see if they had plowed up any meteorites). The guy that 
had this was determined to keep this as a “family heirloom”. I ended up 
offering a pretty substantial amount of money for it in front of his wife at 
the end. He was still determined to keep it. It seems his wife had better ideas 
for the $ this thing would bring them. It was the next morning (like well 
before sunup morning) that he came to seek me out at the motel I told him I was 
staying at (“in case you change your mind, I’ll be at…”). Rather than do 
something nice like knock on the door (he did have the room number) he simply 
sat in his truck honking his horn (yeah, everyone else staying there got woken 
up too). He insisted on cash though (I usually gave a check as it does act as 
something of a “bill of sale” showing I DID pay for the thing. I have heard of 
some getting hit with legal actions after they bought a meteorite with cash 
only to have the original owner come after them later, claiming that they were 
never paid. I did NOT want to get into that position (so I ended up making him 
sign a full “bill of sale”). Unfortunately, it was Saturday morning. NO banks 
were open Saturday in the area. I had to go up to Amarillo to find an open bank 
(and take a big cash advance on my credit card) to make this work. Got that 
done, went home with the stone. Troubles started. Not legal, but research. I 
had to have this compared to every other meteorite of a similar type that was 
found within 15 miles of this one. Well, the most likely candidate was 
Silverton, Tx. The problem here was that the ONLY place that had a thin section 
that would allow this comparison to be done (to the satisfaction of the 
Nomenclature Committee anyway) was a place in Germany. I sent them an already 
made-up thin section of my (10.1kg) stone to make it “quick and easy”. Nope, it 
still took years to get that done. Yep, it turned out to match the piece that 
was found back in 1938. These two pieces came from Jim Schwade who got “them” 
from me back in February of 1991 (probably at the Tucson show that year). Each 
comes with one of his labels. However, while measuring things for this list I 
noticed that these two pieces actually fit together to form a much large part 
slice (there is still one cut edge – likely the piece I cut off of this, likely 
the center slice of the stone I got, for research work). I looked up Silverton 
in Jim’s collection catalog and, yes, there is (was, anyway) a 585g “part 
slice” listed for this meteorite there. It seems that it got dropped or such 
(broken in shipping?) at some point. The weights on the labels are very 
slightly higher than the weights of the pieces. This is because I sanded one 
side back to 220 grit so you can actually see some of the structure of this 
meteorite. Both sides were fairly highly polished. As such, they were very dark 
brown and did not show much of anything with the naked eye.
a) 250.2 gram slice – 130mm x 90mm x 7mm - $850
b) 331.3 gram part slice – 130mm x 120mm x 7mm - $1125
c) both pieces - $1700

WHITECOURT, Canada: Iron. Medium oct. (IIIAB). Found 1906. Tkw = 140.9kg.
This is a completely natural as found individual. Nothing has been done to it 
since it was found. It has a classic shrapnel shape to it. When I’d show 
Sikhote-Alin shrapnel pieces to people in the past I made it a point to tell 
them that this is NOT how a meteorite really looks. For the most part, it 
isn’t. BUT, once a crater is involved….. Now we have at least three different 
meteorites that look (almost exactly) like this (Sikhote-Alin, Gebel Kamil and 
Whitecourt). Enough so that it would be hard to sort them out from one another 
without the aid of scientific equipment. I got this piece in Tucson and kind of 
planned on keeping it for myself. I may still do that if it does not sell. 
Currently, I don’t think I have ANY meteorite specimen from Canada at the 
moment and it might be kind of interesting to have a display showing the 3 
meteorites currently known meteorites that look so similar (yes, Henbury and/or 
Boxhole could qualify but they tend to be a lot smaller and not quite so 
obviously shrapnel shaped).
225.4g shrapnel fragment as found – 75mm x 45mm x 20mm - $1200
--------------
Shipping:

Well, once again, the post office has increased prices (a lot). I knew about 
the increase in the basic “forever” stamps (and stupidly missed buying some 
before the cost went up in July) but did not see an increase in other shipping 
costs. That seems to have now come about. I mailed my first package (actually 
just a padded envelope with a very small item in my smallest jewelry box) since 
August 1st and it ran me over $7 for “ground advantage”!!! (it would have been 
around $15 for priority as they really penalize you if you do not have 
“standard packaging” with priority. Basically forcing you to use a flat-rate 
box or really get screwed on shipping rates). Speaking of flat-rate/ priority 
rates. It now looks like $12 is needed to send a small flat-rate box (yeah, I 
know. You can get it for more like $11 if you do all the work online and print 
the label yourself. However, I have been finding lately that that system has 
been having LOTS of problems lately and I am only able to do such less than 
half the times I try).

I have no idea on what changes have happened in overseas/ out of the country 
rates. I’ll have to custom quote those kind of shipments for now.
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