Hi,

   Can you tell that yesterday it was 100.4 F.
(previous record 98 F.) and today it's 102 F
(previous record 93 F.) with 94% humidity?
A nice day to sit in front of the computer at
a balmy 82 F (with 40% humidity) and worry
about odd metal rocks probably not from
space...

   Meteorite? No way!

   Is this another contest? If so, I vote for
Molybdenum. Yup, Molly Be Damned gets
my vote!

   Here's the photo:
http://www.daytondailynews.com/localnews/content/localnews/photo/18667900_ddn073006mysteriousrocksp2.html

   This is naturally occuring molybdenum ore:
http://www.edzone.net/~tzielask/molybdenum_-_no_label.jpg

   Molybdenum metal in two states of fusion:
http://www.krdnet.com/EBAY/Galleries/october/DSCF2836.JPG
It can be quite granular.

   Polished molybdenite:
http://www.mii.org/Minerals/photomoly.html

   What's "Molly Be Damned" doing in Ohio?

   Any real experts (not me) on The List?


Sterling K. Webb
-------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- From: "Ron Baalke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Meteorite Mailing List" <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Monday, July 31, 2006 11:20 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Metallic Rock Baffles Experts



http://www.daytondailynews.com/localnews/content/localnews/daily/073106mysteryrock.html

Rock baffles experts; can't figure out what it is

A Preble County farmer found the very heavy, likely man-made
pieces on his property.

By Steve Bennish
Dayton Daily News
July 30, 2006

A mysterious 400-pound load of metallic rubble found by a Preble County
farmer in a creek near his home is baffling geology experts at Sinclair
Community College who have tried to analyze it.

The material appears to be man-made and the result of some industrial
process, but even after a half-dozen common tests over many weeks, its
composition and origin remains unknown, said Anne Henry, associate
professor of geology at Sinclair.

The material's unusual properties have baffled testers, Henry said.

Some of it has been found in 20-pound chunks the approximate shape of
squashed bread loaves with scorched, blackish exteriors. Broken open,
the chunks have bright, aluminum-colored, granular interiors with some
traces of green or gold. It does not attract a magnet, nor is it
radioactive.

The hardness of the material is remarkable, measuring between an eight
and a nine on the scientific Mohs scale of hardness, harder than steel
and in the range of precious stones like topaz.

It's also extremely dense, greater than iron and on par with a lead ore
or bronze alloy. Exposed to temperatures of 2,100 degrees Fahrenheit,
the material didn't melt. Scrape a piece of it on unglazed porcelain, a
common geology test, and it leaves a blackish streak.

Research into possible industries in the area that might have generated
the material as waste has come to no conclusions, Henry said.

Mike West, the farmer who found the metal, said he was enjoying an
afternoon with his granddaughter this year on the 80 acres he farms in
northern Preble County when he was throwing some rocks in the creek. "I
picked up one rock and it was unusually heavy, so I saved that one."

Weeks later, still intrigued, he returned with a metal detector. The
detector lit up on the piles of rocks in the creek.

If someone dumped the material long ago, it would have been a tough job.

Not only is the stuff heavy, but the driveway is three-quarters of a
mile from the road. The owner of the land moved there in 1968 and has no
knowledge of the deposit, West said.

West at one time thought it might be the remains of a meteor impact.
Henry doesn't think so, and is pretty much convinced the material is
man-made. Henry hopes that more sophisticated testing, using equipment
the college doesn't have on hand, will expose the nature of the deposit.

Her best guesses are that the material is some form of industrial ingot
or casting. She's hoping a local expert or business will volunteer to
provide some guidance or more advanced testing facilities.

"From a geology point of view, I'd like to know what it is, what its
industrial application is and why it is sitting in this guy's field,"
Henry said.

Contact this reporter at (937) 225-7407 or [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Want to help?

To volunteer expertise help Anne Henry identify the rocks, you can reach
her at (937) 512-4560 or write her at: Anne Henry, Geology Department,
Sinclair Community College, 444 W. Third St., Dayton, OH 45402 or e-mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED]@sinclair.edu.

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