Re: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites for Beginners

2003-12-09 Thread j . divelbiss
 experienced.
 
 Any comments?
 Martin A.
 
 
 
 - Original Message - 
 From: mark ford [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 12:35 PM
 Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites
 
 
 
 
 Here's my top ten
 
 1 Allende
 2 Allende
 3 Allende
 4 Allende
 5 Allende
 6 Allende
 7 Allende
 8 Allende
 9 Allende
 10 Allende
 
 But hey I'm not fussy.
 
 :)
 
 
 
 
 
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Re: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites for Beginners

2003-12-09 Thread David Freeman
meteorites. The lamellae are short and the fields small , thus already on
small surfaces there are a lot of details and the pattern visible (Neumanns,
Troilit eyes, sometimes barred..).
If you don't find an etched Mundrabilla, take a Gibeon, but take care, that
the Widmannstättern are not faible.
2. Juancheng
It's an obseved fall, cheap and much fresher than the Gao-Guenies. Perfect
Peas like Pultusk.
Cut, it's one of the best breccias, which you will find for the money.
3. Sikhote, of course. A famous fall, well available. Choose an entire
specimen with good regmaglypts (no shrapnel) and try to get a blue one
with real fusion crust.
It's the largest iron shower in modern times and the single one which
produced such an immense number of complete, regmaglypted fresh individuals.
No similar iron is available at a comparable low price.
4. Allende.
   one of the cheapest CV3. Covers the corbonaceous group. Contains the
oldest known minerals of the solar system. Observed fall. Take care not to
buy a brownish weathered specimen, choose a cut specimen with those large
witish, irregular shaped inclusions, called CAIs.
5. For the HED-Group Achondrites Millbillillie is ideal, it's fresh, a
classic locality and not more expensive than most of the weathered desert
eucrites. Take a fullslice or an endcut. Pay not more than 15/g at a dealer
or try to get it cheaper from ebay.
6. Now you'll need a real big specimen for putting on the desk, for
impressing your friends, for playing and for satisfying your haptic desires.
Take an unclassified desert find from ebay, don't pay more than 80-120/kg,
except it is a fresh crusted or oriented one. Criteria for the choice:  You
just have to like it and it has to be LARGE!
7. All beginners want to have a piece from Moon or Mars!
   DaG 735 is fresher than DaG 476, both are the cheapest SNCs. Normal
price on ebay would be +/- 250$/g nowadays. Beware of those enthusiasts, who
still have them on their pages at prices from years ago of 1200/g and up.
8. All collectors will feel after a while, that they urgently need a
meteorite found as near as possible to their homes. Search the BMH-online
database to find the findsfalls of your home county and then: happy
hunting!
9. Vaca Muerta is by far the cheapest Mesosiderite. Cheaper than all rusty,
crusty desert Mesos.
   Take a cut specimen, it should be as fresh as possible (take a look if
it has much fresh metal) and choose that one, which has the largest variety
of inclusions. Pay not more than 2 - 2.5$/g.
If it should be a Pallasite: Brenham and Brahin are by far the cheapest, but
problematic concerning rust. Choose a sealed slice (and this is still no
guarantee, that it will remain stable!). Take a Brahin from ebay and don't
pay more than 2$/g.
More expensive, but aesthetic and good boys, are Imilac and Esquel. Very
stable without any prevention. Translucent slices of Imilac (forget the
individuals of Imilac, mostly they are skeletons without olivines) starts
approx. at 15/g, but are more difficult to find than Esquel.
10. See 7.  Why Dho 461?  Because some fools recently got hysteric about a
little oscillation of the Moon prices and didn't get it yet, that the prices
are now again the same as before this short period, so that they still throw
away their Dho 461 at 500$/g, which is a somewhat silly cheap price, hehe.
Keep your fingers away from Nantan, Campo del Cielo, Dronino - they are dirt
cheap, but often rust like hell, so that it's no fun at the beginning and
they will stay cheap until you are more experienced.
Any comments?
Martin A.


- Original Message - 
From: mark ford [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 12:35 PM
Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites



Here's my top ten

1 Allende
2 Allende
3 Allende
4 Allende
5 Allende
6 Allende
7 Allende
8 Allende
9 Allende
10 Allende
But hey I'm not fussy.

:)




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RE: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites

2003-12-08 Thread mark ford


Here's my top ten

1 Allende
2 Allende
3 Allende
4 Allende
5 Allende
6 Allende
7 Allende
8 Allende
9 Allende
10 Allende

But hey I'm not fussy.

:)





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legally privileged. It is intended solely for the person(s) to whom it is
addressed. If you are not a named recipient, you are on notice of its status.
Please notify the sender immediately by reply e-mail and then delete this
message from your system. You must not disclose it to any other person,
copy or distribute it or use it for any purpose.

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Re: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites for Beginners

2003-12-08 Thread Tom aka James Knudson
Martin, I feel like you forgot one!  My most valued meteorite of all, the
only one that will never leave my collection is my 7 gram Gold Basin!  The
GB is my first find and means more to my than all the rest!
Thanks, Tom
Peregrineflier 
Yea, that's right,
The proudest member of the IMCA # 6168
- Original Message -
From: Martin Altmann [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 7:56 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites for Beginners


 Hi - here's my Beginner's Top Ten,

 because I'm sometimes asked, which meteorites would be suitable for the
 beginning collector.

 1. Mundrabilla (etched)
 2. Juancheng
 3. Sikhote-Alin
 4. Allende
 5. Millbillillie
 6. A big unclassified NWA
 7. DaG 735
 8. A meteorite from your home country
 9. Vaca Muerta
 10. Dho 461

 Remarks:
 1. Mundrabilla with a proper etching is one of the most beautiful iron
 meteorites. The lamellae are short and the fields small , thus already on
 small surfaces there are a lot of details and the pattern visible
(Neumanns,
 Troilit eyes, sometimes barred..).
 If you don't find an etched Mundrabilla, take a Gibeon, but take care,
that
 the Widmannstättern are not faible.

 2. Juancheng
 It's an obseved fall, cheap and much fresher than the Gao-Guenies. Perfect
 Peas like Pultusk.
 Cut, it's one of the best breccias, which you will find for the money.

 3. Sikhote, of course. A famous fall, well available. Choose an entire
 specimen with good regmaglypts (no shrapnel) and try to get a blue one
 with real fusion crust.
 It's the largest iron shower in modern times and the single one which
 produced such an immense number of complete, regmaglypted fresh
individuals.
 No similar iron is available at a comparable low price.

 4. Allende.
 one of the cheapest CV3. Covers the corbonaceous group. Contains the
 oldest known minerals of the solar system. Observed fall. Take care not to
 buy a brownish weathered specimen, choose a cut specimen with those large
 witish, irregular shaped inclusions, called CAIs.

 5. For the HED-Group Achondrites Millbillillie is ideal, it's fresh, a
 classic locality and not more expensive than most of the weathered desert
 eucrites. Take a fullslice or an endcut. Pay not more than 15/g at a
dealer
 or try to get it cheaper from ebay.

 6. Now you'll need a real big specimen for putting on the desk, for
 impressing your friends, for playing and for satisfying your haptic
desires.
 Take an unclassified desert find from ebay, don't pay more than 80-120/kg,
 except it is a fresh crusted or oriented one. Criteria for the choice:
You
 just have to like it and it has to be LARGE!

 7. All beginners want to have a piece from Moon or Mars!
 DaG 735 is fresher than DaG 476, both are the cheapest SNCs. Normal
 price on ebay would be +/- 250$/g nowadays. Beware of those enthusiasts,
who
 still have them on their pages at prices from years ago of 1200/g and up.

 8. All collectors will feel after a while, that they urgently need a
 meteorite found as near as possible to their homes. Search the BMH-online
 database to find the findsfalls of your home county and then: happy
 hunting!

 9. Vaca Muerta is by far the cheapest Mesosiderite. Cheaper than all
rusty,
 crusty desert Mesos.
 Take a cut specimen, it should be as fresh as possible (take a look if
 it has much fresh metal) and choose that one, which has the largest
variety
 of inclusions. Pay not more than 2 - 2.5$/g.
 If it should be a Pallasite: Brenham and Brahin are by far the cheapest,
but
 problematic concerning rust. Choose a sealed slice (and this is still no
 guarantee, that it will remain stable!). Take a Brahin from ebay and don't
 pay more than 2$/g.
 More expensive, but aesthetic and good boys, are Imilac and Esquel. Very
 stable without any prevention. Translucent slices of Imilac (forget the
 individuals of Imilac, mostly they are skeletons without olivines) starts
 approx. at 15/g, but are more difficult to find than Esquel.

 10. See 7.  Why Dho 461?  Because some fools recently got hysteric about a
 little oscillation of the Moon prices and didn't get it yet, that the
prices
 are now again the same as before this short period, so that they still
throw
 away their Dho 461 at 500$/g, which is a somewhat silly cheap price, hehe.

 Keep your fingers away from Nantan, Campo del Cielo, Dronino - they are
dirt
 cheap, but often rust like hell, so that it's no fun at the beginning and
 they will stay cheap until you are more experienced.

 Any comments?
 Martin A.



 - Original Message -
 From: mark ford [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Sent: Monday, December 08, 2003 12:35 PM
 Subject: RE: [meteorite-list] My Top 10 of classic meteorites




 Here's my top ten

 1 Allende
 2 Allende
 3 Allende
 4 Allende
 5 Allende
 6 Allende
 7 Allende
 8 Allende
 9 Allende
 10 Allende

 But hey I'm not fussy