Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2014-04-10 Thread MEM


There is one more overlooked obvious answer I didn't cover in my treatise on 
Government agencies -- Worldnewsdailyreport.com where this article appeared is 
apparently a fusion of The National Enquirer and The Onion.com-- both known for 
stories on Bigfoot Alien hybrid babies, crop circles,Elvis reincarnate, Planet 
X and such.  


Whomever wrote the article knew a lot about the personalities involved and took 
the time to locate a good photo.  


It is funny, now.

Elton

On Thursday, April 10, 2014 2:09 AM, MEM mstrema...@yahoo.com wrote:



I saw the photo, read the description and then the researcher's comments-- saw 
that NASA was involved and well and I couldn't help thinking of a moose turd 
variety meteorwrong.  The fact that this photo isn't an actual photo of the 
find suggests that this isn't a hoax so much as a fireball observer pretending 
to be an expert in meteorites.  It was recovered by physicians??? do tell. How 
and Why were they given fireball data that no one else was given? and who the 
heck were they?   Wasn't there a case in recent memory where a NASA expert 
misidentified a meteorite  er a piece of asphalt er a meteorite then laid 
claim to all the glory himself?(Rhetorical)

NASA Meteoroid office does not disclose fireball data to the public against 
their charter but instead grabs whomever is not busy and heads off to do their 
own search.  It takes 3-6 months to get a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 
accknowledged little alone answered.  So here is yet another example of our tax 
money going to support elitist agencies and individuals excluding the public at 
large. 

Many may think NASA personnel must be all knowing experts on everything and, in 
their niche fields they are close to that. Outside their field, they probably 
know less about meteorite recovery than most novices on this list.

I think I'll wait for the final final answer on the microbes.  IF there 
were real live microbes then they would be in a level 4 containment.  Well 
maybe not as there isn't much cross fertilization between the CDC and NASA. 
However there is a protocol and facility in place.  


That said, if we hear of zombies crossing the US Canadian Border I hope our 
current Administration doesn't just wave them through thinking they are more 
dead voters than we already have.

Elton



On Wednesday, April 9, 2014 10:40 AM, Gaetan Cormier shatterc...@gmail.com 
wrote:

Well I was maybe excited for nothing.. this is probably a hoax. The
photo they used to show the meteorite is also found in an article
about antartic meteorites dated back in 2013:
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/main/newsitems/ray-jayawardhana-antarctica

Oh well

Gaetan Cormier
GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm



2014-04-09 10:11 GMT-04:00 Gaetan Cormier shatterc...@gmail.com:
 The fiereball that occured on the evening of March 18th @ 10:24pm over
 Ontario has produced meteorites as some was found with a surprise in
 it!

 http://worldnewsdailyreport.com/canada-extraterrestrial-lifeforms-discovered-in-meteorite-debris/

 Gaetan Cormier
 GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
 Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
 http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm
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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2014-04-10 Thread MEM


I saw the photo, read the description and then the researcher's comments-- saw 
that NASA was involved and well and I couldn't help thinking of a moose turd 
variety meteorwrong.  The fact that this photo isn't an actual photo of the 
find suggests that this isn't a hoax so much as a fireball observer pretending 
to be an expert in meteorites.  It was recovered by physicians??? do tell. How 
and Why were they given fireball data that no one else was given? and who the 
heck were they?   Wasn't there a case in recent memory where a NASA expert 
misidentified a meteorite  er a piece of asphalt er a meteorite then laid 
claim to all the glory himself?(Rhetorical)

NASA Meteoroid office does not disclose fireball data to the public against 
their charter but instead grabs whomever is not busy and heads off to do their 
own search.  It takes 3-6 months to get a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) 
accknowledged little alone answered.  So here is yet another example of our tax 
money going to support elitist agencies and individuals excluding the public at 
large. 

Many may think NASA personnel must be all knowing experts on everything and, in 
their niche fields they are close to that. Outside their field, they probably 
know less about meteorite recovery than most novices on this list.

I think I'll wait for the final final answer on the microbes.  IF there 
were real live microbes then they would be in a level 4 containment.  Well 
maybe not as there isn't much cross fertilization between the CDC and NASA. 
However there is a protocol and facility in place.  


That said, if we hear of zombies crossing the US Canadian Border I hope our 
current Administration doesn't just wave them through thinking they are more 
dead voters than we already have.

Elton


On Wednesday, April 9, 2014 10:40 AM, Gaetan Cormier shatterc...@gmail.com 
wrote:

Well I was maybe excited for nothing.. this is probably a hoax. The
photo they used to show the meteorite is also found in an article
about antartic meteorites dated back in 2013:
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/main/newsitems/ray-jayawardhana-antarctica

Oh well

Gaetan Cormier
GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm



2014-04-09 10:11 GMT-04:00 Gaetan Cormier shatterc...@gmail.com:
 The fiereball that occured on the evening of March 18th @ 10:24pm over
 Ontario has produced meteorites as some was found with a surprise in
 it!

 http://worldnewsdailyreport.com/canada-extraterrestrial-lifeforms-discovered-in-meteorite-debris/

 Gaetan Cormier
 GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
 Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
 http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm
__

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[meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2014-04-09 Thread Gaetan Cormier
The fiereball that occured on the evening of March 18th @ 10:24pm over
Ontario has produced meteorites as some was found with a surprise in
it!

http://worldnewsdailyreport.com/canada-extraterrestrial-lifeforms-discovered-in-meteorite-debris/

Gaetan Cormier
GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm
__

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Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2014-04-09 Thread Gaetan Cormier
Well I was maybe excited for nothing.. this is probably a hoax. The
photo they used to show the meteorite is also found in an article
about antartic meteorites dated back in 2013:
http://www.artsci.utoronto.ca/main/newsitems/ray-jayawardhana-antarctica

Oh well

Gaetan Cormier
GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm


2014-04-09 10:11 GMT-04:00 Gaetan Cormier shatterc...@gmail.com:
 The fiereball that occured on the evening of March 18th @ 10:24pm over
 Ontario has produced meteorites as some was found with a surprise in
 it!

 http://worldnewsdailyreport.com/canada-extraterrestrial-lifeforms-discovered-in-meteorite-debris/

 Gaetan Cormier
 GC Meteorites: http://gcmeteorites.blogspot.com
 Member of the Impact Field Studies Group
 http://web.eps.utk.edu/~faculty/ifsg.htm
__

Visit the Archives at http://www.meteorite-list-archives.com
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list


[meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread wahlperry

Hi All,

 I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not the 
best. We just flew in from Canada today.  What is a fair price per 
gram?   I would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and 
effort to get out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before 
leaving home that if we were lucky enough to find any material that we 
would have to leave it in Canada and go through the proper channels to 
obtain this legally.  Most of the area where the fall took place has 
been locked up with NO TRESPASSING signs posted. We were fortunate 
enough to negotiate a deal with the owners of some private property. We 
have been told the chances of any material leaving Canada with a permit 
is almost impossible. How nice would it be to have a new Canadian 
meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper documentation? This is my 
first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh as this. You can almost rub 
off the fusion crust and the interior is bright white. I will have a 
picture showing the interior of the meteorite posted within the next 
couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to have these 
meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was thinking about 
playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his backpack to 
see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the 
U.S.A telling McCartney  Hey half of the meteorite is mine!  Just 
teasing.



Thanks,
Sonny
  
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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread Jason Utas
Hola,
I've heard that you fellows fetched over a kilogram.
$50/g isn't a bad price for you to set, considering that you both
probably spent less than $1,500 all told for the trip, each.
I mean, it's not like you had to deal with any dangers or risk.  You
left when you knew meteorites had been found, and travelled to a safe,
civilized location.  I suppose there might have been a risk in not
being allowed to search private land, but, honestly...that's not
stopped any hunters I know on this list.
Anyway, it sounds like nice material.  Like every other fresh fall
from the past...well, since forever.
As to your stating that you would say it is up to the individuals
that took the time and effort to get out in the field to do the
recovery work, well, fine.  I just wonder why the hunters who went to
Kilabo, Bensour, Thuathe, Chergach, Bassikounou, and even Park Forest,
charged substantially less than you are supposedly asking for this
fall.
As your friend, fellow hunter, and prospective customer, I'd like to
know why.  Because it looks like you're set to make $25,000 off of
this, along with McCartney (another $25,000).  Why do I, and other
meteorite collectors, owe you that?
Regards,
Jason

On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:14 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Hi All,

  I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not the
 best. We just flew in from Canada today.  What is a fair price per gram?   I
 would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and effort to get
 out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before leaving home that if
 we were lucky enough to find any material that we would have to leave it in
 Canada and go through the proper channels to obtain this legally.  Most of
 the area where the fall took place has been locked up with NO TRESPASSING
 signs posted. We were fortunate enough to negotiate a deal with the owners
 of some private property. We have been told the chances of any material
 leaving Canada with a permit is almost impossible. How nice would it be to
 have a new Canadian meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper
 documentation? This is my first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh as
 this. You can almost rub off the fusion crust and the interior is bright
 white. I will have a picture showing the interior of the meteorite posted
 within the next couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to have
 these meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was thinking
 about playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his backpack to
 see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the U.S.A
 telling McCartney  Hey half of the meteorite is mine!  Just teasing.


 Thanks,
 Sonny
  __
 http://www.meteoritecentral.com
 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread wahlperry

Geez Jason,

You must be on restriction or something!

Sonny



-Original Message-
From: Jason Utas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Meteorite-list meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Sun, 7 Dec 2008 3:11 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale






Hola,
I've heard that you fellows fetched over a kilogram.
$50/g isn't a bad price for you to set, considering that you both
probably spent less than $1,500 all told for the trip, each.
I mean, it's not like you had to deal with any dangers or risk.  You
left when you knew meteorites had been found, and travelled to a safe,
civilized location.  I suppose there might have been a risk in not
being allowed to search private land, but, honestly...that's not
stopped any hunters I know on this list.
Anyway, it sounds like nice material.  Like every other fresh fall
from the past...well, since forever.
As to your stating that you would say it is up to the individuals
that took the time and effort to get out in the field to do the
recovery work, well, fine.  I just wonder why the hunters who went to
Kilabo, Bensour, Thuathe, Chergach, Bassikounou, and even Park Forest,
charged substantially less than you are supposedly asking for this
fall.
As your friend, fellow hunter, and prospective customer, I'd like to
know why.  Because it looks like you're set to make $25,000 off of
this, along with McCartney (another $25,000).  Why do I, and other
meteorite collectors, owe you that?
Regards,
Jason

On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:14 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Hi All,

 I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not 

the
best. We just flew in from Canada today.  What is a fair price per 

gram?   I
would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and effort 

to get
out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before leaving home 

that if
we were lucky enough to find any material that we would have to leave 

it in
Canada and go through the proper channels to obtain this legally.  

Most of
the area where the fall took place has been locked up with NO 

TRESPASSING
signs posted. We were fortunate enough to negotiate a deal with the 

owners
of some private property. We have been told the chances of any 

material
leaving Canada with a permit is almost impossible. How nice would it 

be to

have a new Canadian meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper
documentation? This is my first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh 

as
this. You can almost rub off the fusion crust and the interior is 

bright
white. I will have a picture showing the interior of the meteorite 

posted
within the next couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to 

have
these meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was 

thinking
about playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his 

backpack to
see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the 

U.S.A

telling McCartney  Hey half of the meteorite is mine!  Just teasing.


Thanks,
Sonny
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Meteorite-list mailing list
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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread Jason Utas
...And what's that supposed to mean?


On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 3:41 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
 Geez Jason,

 You must be on restriction or something!

 Sonny



 -Original Message-
 From: Jason Utas [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Meteorite-list meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Sent: Sun, 7 Dec 2008 3:11 pm
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale






 Hola,
 I've heard that you fellows fetched over a kilogram.
 $50/g isn't a bad price for you to set, considering that you both
 probably spent less than $1,500 all told for the trip, each.
 I mean, it's not like you had to deal with any dangers or risk.  You
 left when you knew meteorites had been found, and travelled to a safe,
 civilized location.  I suppose there might have been a risk in not
 being allowed to search private land, but, honestly...that's not
 stopped any hunters I know on this list.
 Anyway, it sounds like nice material.  Like every other fresh fall
 from the past...well, since forever.
 As to your stating that you would say it is up to the individuals
 that took the time and effort to get out in the field to do the
 recovery work, well, fine.  I just wonder why the hunters who went to
 Kilabo, Bensour, Thuathe, Chergach, Bassikounou, and even Park Forest,
 charged substantially less than you are supposedly asking for this
 fall.
 As your friend, fellow hunter, and prospective customer, I'd like to
 know why.  Because it looks like you're set to make $25,000 off of
 this, along with McCartney (another $25,000).  Why do I, and other
 meteorite collectors, owe you that?
 Regards,
 Jason

 On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:14 PM,  [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 Hi All,

  I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not

 the

 best. We just flew in from Canada today.  What is a fair price per

 gram?   I

 would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and effort

 to get

 out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before leaving home

 that if

 we were lucky enough to find any material that we would have to leave

 it in

 Canada and go through the proper channels to obtain this legally.

 Most of

 the area where the fall took place has been locked up with NO

 TRESPASSING

 signs posted. We were fortunate enough to negotiate a deal with the

 owners

 of some private property. We have been told the chances of any

 material

 leaving Canada with a permit is almost impossible. How nice would it

 be to

 have a new Canadian meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper
 documentation? This is my first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh

 as

 this. You can almost rub off the fusion crust and the interior is

 bright

 white. I will have a picture showing the interior of the meteorite

 posted

 within the next couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to

 have

 these meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was

 thinking

 about playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his

 backpack to

 see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the

 U.S.A

 telling McCartney  Hey half of the meteorite is mine!  Just teasing.


 Thanks,
 Sonny
  __
 http://www.meteoritecentral.com
 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list

 __
 http://www.meteoritecentral.com
 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list






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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread RJP
OK, I understand that everyone is welcome to discuss freely on this list, but 
for the love of god people.. enough is enough. We won't see anything (legal) 
from this fall here in the U.S. for a good 6 months, atleast. When (and if) 
those guys get permits to export the material they found, I am sure they are 
quite capable of photographing, cataloging, and determining fair prices for 
their loot based off of the expenses they incured as a result of the trip, 
pysical labor.. plus room for profit (well deserved).

Ryan



-Original Message-
From: Jason Utas meteoritekid at gmail.com
To: Meteorite-list meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Sun, 7 Dec 2008 3:11 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale






Hola,
I've heard that you fellows fetched over a kilogram.
$50/g isn't a bad price for you to set, considering that you both
probably spent less than $1,500 all told for the trip, each.
I mean, it's not like you had to deal with any dangers or risk. You
left when you knew meteorites had been found, and travelled to a safe,
civilized location. I suppose there might have been a risk in not
being allowed to search private land, but, honestly...that's not
stopped any hunters I know on this list.
Anyway, it sounds like nice material. Like every other fresh fall
from the past...well, since forever.
As to your stating that you would say it is up to the individuals
that took the time and effort to get out in the field to do the
recovery work, well, fine. I just wonder why the hunters who went to
Kilabo, Bensour, Thuathe, Chergach, Bassikounou, and even Park Forest,
charged substantially less than you are supposedly asking for this
fall.
As your friend, fellow hunter, and prospective customer, I'd like to
know why. Because it looks like you're set to make $25,000 off of
this, along with McCartney (another $25,000). Why do I, and other
meteorite collectors, owe you that?
Regards,
Jason

On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:14 PM, wahlperry at aol.com wrote:

 Hi All,



 I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not

the

 best. We just flew in from Canada today. What is a fair price per

gram? I

 would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and effort

to get

 out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before leaving home

that if

 we were lucky enough to find any material that we would have to leave

it in

 Canada and go through the proper channels to obtain this legally.

Most of

 the area where the fall took place has been locked up with NO

TRESPASSING

 signs posted. We were fortunate enough to negotiate a deal with the

owners

 of some private property. We have been told the chances of any

material

 leaving Canada with a permit is almost impossible. How nice would it

be to

 have a new Canadian meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper

 documentation? This is my first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh

as

 this. You can almost rub off the fusion crust and the interior is

bright

 white. I will have a picture showing the interior of the meteorite

posted

 within the next couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to

have

 these meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was

thinking

 about playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his

backpack to

 see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the

U.S.A

 telling McCartney Hey half of the meteorite is mine! Just teasing.





 Thanks,

 Sonny

 __

 http://www.meteoritecentral.com

 Meteorite-list mailing list

 Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com

 http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list



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Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale

2008-12-07 Thread Pete Pete


Hi, all,
 
 
I may have missed it in a past post, but has the new Canadian meteorite been 
given a fall name yet?
 
Cheers,
Pete
 
 
 

 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Sun, 7 Dec 2008 20:30:29 -0500
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale
 
 Maybe that someone isn't getting it...wow. Sonny and McCartney, if the
 market is willing to pay you $50,000 for your recoveries, congrats on a job
 well done.
 Dave
 www.fallingrocks.com 
 
 -Original Message-
 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Jason Utas
 Sent: Sunday, December 07, 2008 6:52 PM
 To: Meteorite-list
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale
 
 ...And what's that supposed to mean?
 
 
 On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 3:41 PM,  wrote:
 Geez Jason,

 You must be on restriction or something!

 Sonny



 -Original Message-
 From: Jason Utas 
 To: Meteorite-list 
 Sent: Sun, 7 Dec 2008 3:11 pm
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite for sale






 Hola,
 I've heard that you fellows fetched over a kilogram.
 $50/g isn't a bad price for you to set, considering that you both 
 probably spent less than $1,500 all told for the trip, each.
 I mean, it's not like you had to deal with any dangers or risk. You 
 left when you knew meteorites had been found, and travelled to a safe, 
 civilized location. I suppose there might have been a risk in not 
 being allowed to search private land, but, honestly...that's not 
 stopped any hunters I know on this list.
 Anyway, it sounds like nice material. Like every other fresh fall 
 from the past...well, since forever.
 As to your stating that you would say it is up to the individuals 
 that took the time and effort to get out in the field to do the 
 recovery work, well, fine. I just wonder why the hunters who went to 
 Kilabo, Bensour, Thuathe, Chergach, Bassikounou, and even Park Forest, 
 charged substantially less than you are supposedly asking for this 
 fall.
 As your friend, fellow hunter, and prospective customer, I'd like to 
 know why. Because it looks like you're set to make $25,000 off of 
 this, along with McCartney (another $25,000). Why do I, and other 
 meteorite collectors, owe you that?
 Regards,
 Jason

 On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 2:14 PM,  wrote:

 Hi All,

 I would have responded earlier but our Internet connection was not

 the

 best. We just flew in from Canada today. What is a fair price per

 gram? I

 would say it is up to the individuals that took the time and effort

 to get

 out in the field to do the recovery work. I knew before leaving home

 that if

 we were lucky enough to find any material that we would have to leave

 it in

 Canada and go through the proper channels to obtain this legally.

 Most of

 the area where the fall took place has been locked up with NO

 TRESPASSING

 signs posted. We were fortunate enough to negotiate a deal with the

 owners

 of some private property. We have been told the chances of any

 material

 leaving Canada with a permit is almost impossible. How nice would it

 be to

 have a new Canadian meteorite from a witnessed fall with proper 
 documentation? This is my first time to pick up a meteorite as fresh

 as

 this. You can almost rub off the fusion crust and the interior is

 bright

 white. I will have a picture showing the interior of the meteorite

 posted

 within the next couple of days. So lets keep our fingers crossed to

 have

 these meteorites in the U.S.A within 6 months to a year. I was

 thinking

 about playing a joke on Mccartney and placing a meteorite in his

 backpack to

 see if he could make it through customs and once we made it into the

 U.S.A

 telling McCartney Hey half of the meteorite is mine! Just teasing.


 Thanks,
 Sonny
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[meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2008-12-05 Thread Greg Hupe

Hello All,

I hope all who are finding material from the new Canadian meteorite fall are 
sending their GPS coordinates to the investigating scientists so they can 
compile the data into their databases to get the best possible length and 
width of the strewnfield. Not only that, it is a great opportunity for 
scientists, hunters and collectors to work together!


Congratulations to Sonny, McCartney and all who have already found some of 
this new chondrite!!


Best regards,
Greg


Greg Hupe
The Hupe Collection
NaturesVault (eBay)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.LunarRock.com
IMCA 3163

Click here for my current eBay auctions: 
http://search.ebay.com/_W0QQsassZnaturesvault




- Original Message - 
From: Michael Farmer [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, December 05, 2008 1:22 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Ad New Canadian Meteorite for sale


This is where pricing becomes difficult. Carancas was an extraordinary 
event. Very little material found, half of what was found was dust. $100 
gram was a fair price, as I sold out at that price in hours.
The 13 kilo piece of the Canadian fall weighs as much as nearly all of the 
Carancas found.  Some pieces sell cheap now because people in Peru and 
Bolivia held too long, waiting for more money, while I and others filled 
up all buyers and museums, now there is not the demand because everyone 
already has it.


Canada is a widespread fall, apparently everyone and their brother  up 
there has found stones, so they will start trickling out. The videos make 
this fall a must have. I am not trying to set a price, just mulling over 
the last decade of falls and the price outcomes and this is where I see it 
ending up. Depends of course on export etc, but Canadian government will 
not spend millions of this chondrite. Tagish was a different creature, 
rarest meteorite almost that ever fell.
We will see, it will take months to get export permits, time for TKW etc 
to firm up and tell us more.

mike



--- On Fri, 12/5/08, Greg Catterton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:


From: Greg Catterton [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Ad New Canadian Meteorite for sale
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Date: Friday, December 5, 2008, 11:15 AM
I agree 100% on this. $50 per gram is too high, the Carancas
for example was $100 per gram at first, now it can be had
for under $20 per gram.
I have read several places that it is only valued at $1 -
$10 per gram. I will wait a bit myself.

Greg


--- On Fri, 12/5/08, Michael Farmer
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 From: Michael Farmer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Ad New Canadian
Meteorite for sale
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Friday, December 5, 2008, 1:10 PM
 This meteorite will end up with a retail value of ~$10
gram
 or so, give or take a few $ and perhaps $25 gram for
small
 stones. There will be a huge amount of this meteorite
found,
 the videos show every local schoolkid walking around
with
 meteorites, and the real hunting hasnt even started
yet. The
 snow is about to fall, putting the meteorite in deep
freeze.
 Most of us hunters are talking and planning major
hunts for
 springtime when the thaw comes.
 I forsee at least a few hundred kilos of stones being
 found.
 Canada will allow export of stones, that wont be a
problem
 for a common chondrite, since the government will have
 plenty of material.
 Kudos to Sonny and McCartney, but the price will not
be set
 be a single sale.
 Michael Farmer


 --- On Fri, 12/5/08, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

  From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Ad New Canadian
 Meteorite for sale
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED],
 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
  Date: Friday, December 5, 2008, 10:58 AM
  Greg,
 
  As I understand, the Canadian law  was put in
place to
 give
  Canadian
  Scientists first shot at ALL the grant money  on
 research
  for any newly found
  meteorites in Canada.
 
  If any  meteorite is allowed outside the Canadian
 borders,
  it would allow
  some other  scientist or institution in another
 country to
  get that grant money.
  In  some cases that grant money could total in
the
 tens of
  thousands or
  hundreds of  thousands of dollars.
 
  I am not sure what Canadian Meteorite Researchers

 earn
  each year, but their
  salaries can't be cheap for their employers.

 
  So, as long as the physical rock stayed in
Canada,
 then no
  harm can be  done
  to the Canadian scientists.
 
  Years ago, I purchased a new Canadian  Meteorite
when
 I
  drove to Canada.  I
  gave it to a Canadian collector to  hold for me
when I
  returned to the states
  to figure out what I wanted to do with  it.  I
then
 sold
  the ownership of the
  rock to another American meteorite  dealer, even
 though the
  rock 

Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite

2008-12-05 Thread MeteorHntr
Greg and All,

I agree Greg, and likewise I hope the Canadian  Government Researchers are 
making their GPS coordinates of all their finds  available to private hunters 
so 
that the private hunters can compile data into  their GPS units to be able to 
get all the meteorites recovered from within the  strewnfield.

I totally agree with Greg, this is a great opportunity for  scientists, 
hunters and collectors to work together.
 
In fact, if the government employees would publicly state how much they  
would be willing to buy, and at what price they will pay, agreeing to let the  
rest go through the export permit process without challenge would be a great  
help too.  If local land owners and hunters would know what the values  would 
be, 
then better decisions could be made for everyone involved.
 
Quotes in the newspapers that there could be millions of dollars of  
meteorites on the ground and that a head sized rock could be worth $50,000 
or  
that a 1 kilo rock is worth $10,000 is all nice, but it is so vague as to 
what  
the real values are that I am sure the locals are a bit confused right now. 
 
Letting the locals cash in on the finds will only help more Canadians in  
future falls get excited about going out and hunting too.
 
It will turn out bad if all the locals think that if 500,000 g are found  
that they can automatically expect to get $5,000,000 (or more) out of it, then  
the government ends up only buying a kilo's worth and then no one else is  
interested in paying anything 6 months from now because a new fall (or 2 or  3) 
will have diverted everyone's attention elsewhere.

Letting all the  kilos of Tagish Lake fall to the bottom of the lake when the 
thaw came was an  embarrassment for all the people claiming they were acting 
in the best interest  of science by not sharing the information.  Here is 
their chance to  redeem themselves, while the world is watching.

If there is indeed  thousands of stones, weighing hundreds of kilos total, 
there is no way a single  college professor/researcher will be able to hunt the 
entire strewnfield... even  if he took a 10 year sabbatical to keep hunting.

But with cooperation  with the private hunters, there is a chance that many 
if not most could be found  in a short period of time, maybe in a year or two.

We will see what  happens...

Steve Arnold #1
www.SteveArnoldMeteorites.com  



In a message dated 12/5/2008 12:46:39 P.M. Central Standard  Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Hello All,

I hope all who are finding  material from the new Canadian meteorite fall are 
sending their GPS  coordinates to the investigating scientists so they can 
compile the data  into their databases to get the best possible length and 
width of the  strewnfield. Not only that, it is a great opportunity for 
scientists,  hunters and collectors to work together!

Congratulations to Sonny,  McCartney and all who have already found some of 
this new  chondrite!!

Best regards,
Greg
 
**Make your life easier with all your friends, email, and 
favorite sites in one place.  Try it now. 
(http://www.aol.com/?optin=new-dpicid=aolcom40vanityncid=emlcntaolcom0010)
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[meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite (Not the Fall!)

2008-12-02 Thread tett

List,



Not too much has been mentioned about the new Canadian iron to be found as 
most of the press has been given to the new fall in Lloydminster Sask..




Instead of driving from Edmonton two hours east to Saskatchewan you can 
drive about the same west to Whitecourt Alberta and see a newly discovered 
crater with lots of iron meteorites.  It is now protected to help preserve 
the small crater which is too bad for meteorite hunters.  Hopefully some 
science will be gained at the cost of keeping us out from gobbling up some 
nice irons.  Apparently there are lots of Sikhote like irons to be found. 
Friends from the University of Western Ontario were out to Whitecourt last 
month and retrieved lots of material.




A very exciting find because the crater is so very young and in great shape.



An exciting time for Canadian meteorite enthusiasts.



Here is more info: http://easweb.eas.ualberta.ca/page/108



Cheers!



Mike Tettenborn

One anxious Canadian meteorite enthusiast waiting for his piece of 
Lloydminster


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[meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite!

2002-06-13 Thread Tettenborn



NEWS!

A third Canadian Pallasite has been found in 
Southampton. This is just 30km from where I live.

2500 gms individual was found in April 2001 by a 78 
year old retired pipe fitter. This gentleman was strolling along the beach 
and came across this beauty. 

The meteorite was classified at Western University, 
London, Ontario.

I will post more later.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn
Owen Sound, Ontario

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Mike Reynolds 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
  Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:08 
  PM
  Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] OT: solar 
  eclipse
  
  
  All:
  Wehave just returned from Mexico. We 
  were near the "center line" just south of Puerto Vallarta. After fording a 
  river, dealing with a rattlesnake, and winds that were whipping up sand, we 
  "gringos" set up on the beach for what looked like a dismal afternoon of 
  clouds.
  There was no sign of the sun at all. 
  Until--would you believe just around mid-eclipse--out from the cloud layer 
  slips this spectacular red-orange ring! Beads were also visible during the 
  minute or so. Then with no fanfare, the ring slipped back into the clouds. The 
  flock of pink flamingos flying over before central eclipse should have been 
  "the sign."
  And yes... photos of the annular 
  eclipse will be short in coming (I just dropped my film off today, but have 
  already seen one from our group of "gringos" and need permission to post 
  it!).
  Keep Looking Up,
  Mike 
Reynolds


Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite!

2002-06-13 Thread Michael Farmer



PHOTOS, WE ALL WANT PHOTOS! 
Mike Farmer

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Tettenborn 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
  Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 3:27 
  PM
  Subject: [meteorite-list] New Canadian 
  Meteorite!
  
  NEWS!
  
  A third Canadian Pallasite has been found in 
  Southampton. This is just 30km from where I live.
  
  2500 gms individual was found in April 2001 by a 
  78 year old retired pipe fitter. This gentleman was strolling along the 
  beach and came across this beauty. 
  
  The meteorite was classified at Western 
  University, London, Ontario.
  
  I will post more later.
  
  Cheers,
  
  Mike Tettenborn
  Owen Sound, Ontario
  
- Original Message - 
From: 
Mike Reynolds 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:08 
PM
Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] OT: solar 
eclipse


All:
Wehave just returned from Mexico. We 
were near the "center line" just south of Puerto Vallarta. After fording a 
river, dealing with a rattlesnake, and winds that were whipping up sand, we 
"gringos" set up on the beach for what looked like a dismal afternoon of 
clouds.
There was no sign of the sun at 
all. Until--would you believe just around mid-eclipse--out from the cloud 
layer slips this spectacular red-orange ring! Beads were also visible during 
the minute or so. Then with no fanfare, the ring slipped back into the 
clouds. The flock of pink flamingos flying over before central eclipse 
should have been "the sign."
And yes... photos of the annular 
eclipse will be short in coming (I just dropped my film off today, but have 
already seen one from our group of "gringos" and need permission to post 
it!).
Keep Looking Up,
Mike 
  Reynolds


Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite!

2002-06-13 Thread Tettenborn



Nice picture in my local news paper. Will see 
if this is on line and let you know.

Mike T.

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Michael 
  Farmer 
  To: Tettenborn ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
  Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 6:48 
  PM
  Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] New 
  Canadian Meteorite!
  
  PHOTOS, WE ALL WANT PHOTOS! 
  Mike Farmer
  
- Original Message - 
From: 
Tettenborn 
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 

Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 3:27 
PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] New Canadian 
Meteorite!

NEWS!

A third Canadian Pallasite has been found in 
Southampton. This is just 30km from where I live.

2500 gms individual was found in April 2001 by 
a 78 year old retired pipe fitter. This gentleman was strolling along 
the beach and came across this beauty. 

The meteorite was classified at Western 
University, London, Ontario.

I will post more later.

Cheers,

Mike Tettenborn
Owen Sound, Ontario

  - Original Message - 
  From: 
  Mike Reynolds 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
  
  Sent: Thursday, June 13, 2002 5:08 
  PM
  Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] OT: 
  solar eclipse
  
  
  All:
  Wehave just returned from Mexico. We 
  were near the "center line" just south of Puerto Vallarta. After fording a 
  river, dealing with a rattlesnake, and winds that were whipping up sand, 
  we "gringos" set up on the beach for what looked like a dismal afternoon 
  of clouds.
  There was no sign of the sun at 
  all. Until--would you believe just around mid-eclipse--out from the cloud 
  layer slips this spectacular red-orange ring! Beads were also visible 
  during the minute or so. Then with no fanfare, the ring slipped back into 
  the clouds. The flock of pink flamingos flying over before central eclipse 
  should have been "the sign."
  And yes... photos of the annular 
  eclipse will be short in coming (I just dropped my film off today, but 
  have already seen one from our group of "gringos" and need permission to 
  post it!).
  Keep Looking Up,
  Mike 
Reynolds


Re: [meteorite-list] New Canadian Meteorite!

2002-06-13 Thread Tracy Latimer

Gimme, gimme, gimme! drool

Tracy Latimer
p.s. the pix would be nice too.



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