Hi

Interesting, but I don't think this supports any tektite formation theories. 
Tektites were either plastically deformed when proximal, spalled when medial or 
ablated and then often spalled when distal.

Rain drops are, however, very informative about proximal tektites, which 
basically follow the same formation method with two big difference: Tektites 
cool and 'freeze' in transient morphologies and the tektite 'liquid' is of 
different viscosity (continually becoming more viscous as temperature drops). 
These transient tektite morphologies comprise discs and teardrops. Rain drops 
are spherical - when larger they become concavo-convex discs and then cascade 
into smaller spheres. If only the early tektite researchers had studied 
proximal tektites and not distal forms - their conclusions on the aerodynamics 
would have to be that tektites either formed on the Earth or that the moon has 
a significant atmosphere (or that tektites arrived from the moon in a huge 
molten blob which was disrupted during re-entry - but that's getting desperate).

Ice cubes give an insight to tektite formation - they cool from the outside-in 
thus giving a radial pattern internally. Tektites also cool from the outside-in 
and have a radial internal structure with bubble complexes often trapped in the 
centre. 

Hail stones grow from the inside out and so have a concentric structure unlike 
tektites. These hailstones pictured are weird - they look like hailstones that 
have had icicles grow on them. They form in a totally different way to 
tektites, but interesting nonetheless. Tektites do not grow - they distort, 
spall (explosively fragment and lose mass) or ablate (lose mass by material 
melting and flowing from the specimen) during re-entry.

Found an interesting paper on these lobed hailstones here:
http://journals.ametsoc.org/doi/pdf/10.1175/1520-0469%281970%29027%3C0667%3ALSOH%3E2.0.CO%3B2

Regards, Aubrey
www.tektites.co.uk



--- On Thu, 24/3/11, Mike Groetz <mpg4...@gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Mike Groetz <mpg4...@gmail.com>
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Very Interesting Photo- Tektite Related
> To: "Meteorite List" <meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com>
> Date: Thursday, 24 March, 2011, 12:17
> List-
>    Check out this ice hail photo. It really substantiates
> the theories
> behind tektite formation.
> 
> http://www.coasttocoastam.com/photo/category/photo-of-the-day
> 
>   Have a good day.
> 
> Mike
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