Hi Steve,

To add more opinionative fuel to the theoretical fire, the moment at
which any particular specimen becomes a class complete with type
specimen is the moment it is no longer so rare that it is alone in its
petrology or chemistry.

Therefore (and this is a job for SuperBernd), one might need to dip
down into the annals of those mysterious meteorites who have no peers.
Then choose the smallest TKW.

But, of course, all that work and artificial value could be undone in
just one split second. I'm glad I had not invested in CV3s on February
7th, 1969, or CM2s on September 27, 1969, or Shergottities on October
2, 1962.

Best,

Martin


On Wed, Aug 19, 2009 at 7:34 PM, steve
arnold<stevenarnold60...@yahoo.com> wrote:
> 6 years ago right after the park forest fall,I was working with a small 
> college with a trade that netted me my .97 gram fragment of KAKANGARI K class 
> meteorite.I traded a 370 gram whole individual  of park forest to get that K 
> class piece.It is only one of three K class type's out there.So to me that is 
> the rarest class of meteorite out there.This has been  a most interesting 
> thread.It's nice to see when some lame brain is bashing me or someone 
> else.People have to learn to grow up.
>  Steve R. Arnold, Chicago!!
>
>
>
>
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