Hi Elton,

I think it is that thin coating of magnetite that most folks are calling a 
fusion crust on fresh irons...what else can it be called?

As you say, unfortunately it is quite fragile and on most irons it flakes or 
comes off after very little time in our climate, so most of those wonderful 
looking sikhote alins at the shows have actually been cleaned and treated and 
have lost the magnetite 'fusion crust'. I have seen many with remnants which 
you can see still peeling off but rarely in their pristine matt grey original 
state. Also, as you say, those flow lines can be still present mostly 
underneath when the magnetite/crust has gone but are I think much more detailed 
and sharp when the magnetite coating is fresh.

If you know of a different name/term to call the magnetite coating on fresh 
irons other than fusion crust then I am sure we would all like to know what we 
should call it?

Regards,

Graham



---- MEM <mstrema...@yahoo.com> wrote: 
> Stopping in a few minutes to state again that all this discussion about 
> fusion crust on irons is right next to unicorns postulations.  Everyone says 
> that fusion crust on irons exists but no one can come up with the proof. 
> Non-silicate bearing irons DO NOT/CANNOT have FUSION crust: they have a very 
> fragile magentite micro-crystal "film" and they have an ablation surface but, 
> they can't by definition have a "fusion crust" and no matter whom the expert 
> quoted they still do not have a fusion crust. A fusion crust has to have a 
> silicate source to for the glass component of the crust--  Nada, Nix, No How. 
>  
> 
> Both silicate and non-silicate meteorites have an ablated/ablation surface, 
> and they can show flight features--but not all meteorites have a fusion 
> crust.  I have some OCs which have flow lines UNDER the fusion crust remnants.
> 
> If anyone still defends the presence of fusion crust on (non-silicate 
> bearing) irons then show me the "crust"...can't?..ok show me the glass? ....  
> right then-- no photos, no thin sections, no micro graphs???......And while 
> there was one close up of an ablated surface showing soft wavy lines of 
> briefly melted metal that was aligned to aerodynamic vectors--This does not 
> fusion crust make.
> 
> Unlike in politics and public opinion, in science, no matter how often an 
> untruth is repeated it doesn't become "truth" by majority belief. But 
> science, being a human endeavor, sometimes can find itself "off track" and 
> when it does it accepts the error and gets back on track.
> 
> Elton
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