I'm with Ken on this matter. I, frankly, am dumbfounded to see this material 
held out as meteorites, as I believe a member of an collectors association 
should be held to a higher standard and should police themselves more strictly 
than they police others.  

It is a breach of good taste if not a full fledged breach of ethics to 
co-mingle these specimens that in the slightest way leaves the door open for an 
inference  that these are meteorites!  Showing a "pink" swap implying a 
positive nickel test is dishonest, and at a minimum shows ignorance about the 
occurrence of false positive results in the presence of iron-- DUH.  We've been 
down this path before by other members setting up web pages lumping together 
meteor-wrongs with meteorites in some magical belief that doing so will make 
the wrongs transform into real meteorites.

Clearly the ability to set up a nice web page doesn't translate to the ability 
to identify meteorites not a license to do so haphazardly.   Not speaking for 
the other than myself, as membership qualification is the purview of any trade 
organization, but membership in such organization implies to me something above 
the novice level about meteorites.  Seems some can buy the logo and leave 
ethics at the door since membership infers a status of expertise quick ride to 
the top. I think the logo displayee owes the entire community of meteorite 
collectors a duty to be totally honest as shabby or shady implications reflects 
on the individual and it harms any student of meteorites buy presenting 
blatantly bogus specimens.  

Self-naming of suspected meteorites when the naming of meteorites is a well 
established known process is indefensible and a disservice to the public.

Makes about as much sense to me as it would be to hold out myself as a brain 
surgeon because I've see some brain photos, grew up watching M.A.S.H. and 
dissected some frog brains in biology.

I further agree that we all should really do a reasonable amount of foundation 
study before shooting baloney theories about rocks and minerals in general and 
the source of magnetism in naturally magnetic hematite nodules.

Elton 

> <http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=244>
> camp acapulcoite
> camp diogenite
> camp howardite
> camp pallasite
> camp122006
> Limedale
> Mammoth Springs
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