Re: [meteorite-list] Happy Birthday New Concord!

2002-05-01 Thread Martin Horejsi
Title: Re: [meteorite-list] Happy Birthday New Concord!



Hi Mike and All,

New Concord is a real beauty, especially for an L6. Here is a link to a photo of a New Concord slice in my collection. 

http://www.meteorite.com/gallery/new_concord.htm 

The chondrule (inclusion?) in the middle of the slice is about 6mm in diameter. I guess this chondrule escaped the geologic villain that took the life of many other chondrules that once lived in this stone.

Cheers,

Martin



On 5/1/02 12:51 PM, Michael Farmer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

Today 142 years ago, a large meteorite fell in Ohio. It is named New Concord. It is a wonderful beautiful L6. One stone was reported to have killed a colt, I am not sure why this is so often overlooked in the kill debates. 
I have a beautiful fragment of this meteorite in my collection, acquired from the ASU collection. 
You can see it on my website at
www.meteoritehunter.com http://www.meteoritehunter.com 
 
I have vastly updated my website over the last few days, adding meteorites from my collection, some never seen before.
 
Mike Farmer








Re: [meteorite-list] Happy Birthday New Concord!

2002-05-01 Thread Dave Schultz

I seem to remember a few years ago about an insurance company commercial on
TV where this guy was driving down a street and sees this big fireball
streaking towards him. He`s really freaking out and by the time the fireball
hits his windshield, it might weigh maybe a gram or two, and all that
happens is a little crack in his windshield! You would have thought that
this character would have stopped to pick it up for his insurance claim, but
N! It was a cool commercial though. :)  Dave
- Original Message -
From: Michael Blood [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Martin Horejsi [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Wednesday, May 01, 2002 6:41 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Happy Birthday New Concord!


 Hi Mike  Martin,
 New Concord certainly did not escape my awareness for meteoritic
 hammers (that nailed something). It is one of about 20 I offer in
 my Hammer Set, and one of the largest - a several gram specimen
 in each set. New Concord is nice, fresh, beautiful stuff, well
 documented,
 as well.unlike the ol' Nakhla Dog (bait, bait), which I also include
 in the set, though in a Bessey Speck sample, of course, to keep the
 sets affordable. While I don't sell individual specimens apart from the
 set, I WILL TRADE to get a hammer I don't yet have, or have only tiny
 bits of.
 Some of these guyes have really interesting pedagrees, such as
 Barwell, which struck not only cars and buildings, but one stone
 flew in a window, bounced off the floor and landed in a cup of tea!
 Of course, there are more common examples, such as Allende
 (roofs, houses  patios), Holbrook (Train Station), Juancheng (through
 a roof into a pot on the stove!), etc. So, we don't only have dead
 cows, horses, cars and mailboxes, but a slew of other items, as well
 as a badly bruised housewife.
 For a TERRIFIC list of hammers throughout history, see the extensive
 list maintained by  Walter Branch at:
 http://www.branchmeteorites.com/MetStruck.html
 In my sets, so far, at least, the hardest to get was the Sylagauga
 which
 is exceptionally well documented as hitting a woman. I have HEARD
 of one reputed to go through a car windshield and strike the driver in
 the hand, but I have NEVER seen the material offered also, I want
 more
  have only Bessey Specks of the extremely rare HH, Burnwell (Sept.4,
 1990 Pike Co. KY TKW 1.504kg - Single stone fell through a porch), Canon
 City, Co.  Bovedy, Ireland. Of course, my gratest interest lay in
 specimens
 of which I have none.and there are many listed at the site
 referenced above.
 Anyone who has any fall that hit something, which I do not have yet
 or of which I have only tiny amounts, I would be very interested
 in purchasing and/or trading. I have only about 20 different falls in my
 sets so far.
 I consider hammers to be, by far, the most interesting of all falls.
 I know some collectors collect ONLY falls  not finds - these are the
 kings and queens of falls for my money. My favorites are Peekskill,
 mostly
 because I have a video tape of the magnificent fall, Valera, because of
 its lethality and beauty, Claxton, just appeals to the 12 year old
 vandal
 I once was, Sylacauga - because it actually hit a PERSON and, New
 Concord, again, for the beauty, freshness and lethality. These guys
 really tell
 impressive tales!
 Best wishes, Michael



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