Hello Everyone!
MeteoriteTimes for October is now up.
As always a big thank you to all the writers who make it possible.
Just a reminder that all previous Months are on-line under the "Back Links"
link at the top of the page.
Also, all previous articles are indexed on-line under the "Article Inde
Yeah right. Russia has the same policy
Bill Kieskowski
> The Indian government has a publication (a copy of which I obtained from
> Mike Farmer) on that country's archive of meteorites for research. In it
> they state the gvt. policy that all meteorites found in that country are
> property o
What rumor? We are serious about such things. It is more likely this type of
voracious mollusk swallowed the meteoroid by mistake, and then ended up with
a blockage in its' bowel that just wouldn't clear.
Most of the bulky mollusk in those days probably could take a direct impact
hit...almost
>A recent thread on the meteorite-list suggested a possible martian
> meteoroid stream with a maximum on October 3rd. List member Steve Schoner
> suggested this, and pointed out that two famous martian meteorite falls,
> Chassigny (1815), and Zagami (1962) fell on this date. No location of a
>
Pekka & The List,
I think we must use Monica Grady et. al. and the
recent 'Catalogue of Meteorites' as the definite authority
of what constitute a meteorite fall/find or not.
Brunflo and Osterplana is included in the Catalogue.
As seems to be indicated by other postings here, there are other
quarr
I have spoken to the owner for a long time today.
The rest of the meteorite has been recovered, and
thankfully, none of it was damaged by the water. Apparently it was far more
minor than he thought. It is being stroed for the next month or so.
Mike Farmer
Hi Pekka,
many thanks for putting the picture online!
http://www.dlc.fi/~nuuska/kinnekulle.jpg
It's fascinating - I think now the problem of the conservation of meteorites
is solved:
Just throw your collections in the next ocean or lake.
Martin A.
- Original Message -
From: "Pekka
The Indian government has a publication (a copy of which I obtained from
Mike Farmer) on that country's archive of meteorites for research. In it
they state the gvt. policy that all meteorites found in that country are
property of the gvt. BY LAW and can be traded only by their research
facilities
Hi,
Omigod! The Nakhla Mollusk! Did anyone actually see this Mollusk
being struck by the meteorite? Or is this merely a hysterical rumor
being spread far and wide in the Mollusk community?
Sterling K. Webb
Pekka Savolai
The H.H.Nininger Collection of Meteorites (1933 version) lists a meteorite that I find no where else in the literature. It'll be obvious to many on the list why I would like to know about this.
"Ollague, Bolivia, South America. Pallasite. P. Found 1924. Known Wt. 6.66 Kgs. Specimen:146a. 376 gr
Makes one wonder if the recent spate of fireballs are
somehow related to this.
Steve Schoner
--- Ron Baalke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> This object is listed on our Earth Close Approach
> Tables:
>
> http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/neo/close.html
>
> 2003 SQ222 passed by the Earth at 0.2 lunar
> d
If memory serves, the petography of the Swedish fossil meteorites
(Thorsberg/Kinnekulle) (480mya) was altered/ replaced (chemically).
Most of their original chemistry is gone, being true fossils, their
physical form was retained. Someone noted here that while the
meteorites had been large
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2003/10/1002_031002_cometstudy.html
Did Comets Make Life On Earth Possible?
Stefan Lovgren
National Geographic News
October 2, 2003
An ambitious new NASA research project aims to answer perhaps
the most vexing and profound of scientific mysteries: How did
This object is listed on our Earth Close Approach Tables:
http://neo.jpl.nasa.gov/neo/close.html
2003 SQ222 passed by the Earth at 0.2 lunar distances. It is only
about 3 to 6 meters in diameter.
Ron Baalke
--
http://www.new
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I am in the process of collecting jokes, comic strips, etc. regarding meteors, meteorites, comets, and space in general. I am wanting to use these materials in presentations and workshops. If you know of any, would you please send them to me or tell me where I can f
Maybe all of the hoopla will motivate him to put on a
wet suit and a mask and dig up the rest that is, as
you say sitting in sewage water.
Steve Schoner
(Such pieces could be sold at latrine low prices,
compared to the others that are not so "crappy")
--- Michael Farmer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrot
Hello, Bjorn and the list,
well, I usually use the cataloque as a base. Just tried to get
some sense to the quantities of the swedish meteorites
published in the swedsih and international press. Suppose,
the data was given by the swedish NHM.
I gladly aggree with Mrs Grady and the cataloque, e
Hello, Martin A. and the list.
and thank you for the pic, Martin A. Well, these are really
not micrometeorites.
I put the pic on the net;
http://www.dlc.fi/~nuuska/kinnekulle.jpg
just to save time and trouble from Martin, hope this is ok.
If not, Martin, please, let me know, and I´ll remove the
Hullo,
Again, another eBay ad - sorry it so non-contributary to the list... but
here we go again - a micro of rare stuff for those who collect micros!
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=3239&item=2194937615
Thanks for your patience
dave
IMCA #0092
___
Hi Dave and all,
I can personally vouch for Atul's sincerity and kindness and just wanting to help
anyone wanting to go over there and hunt. It never hurts to have contacts and I know
that Atul's only motivation was and is for peoples safety as well as getting them to
the fall more effectively. Ev
Hello, Martin and the list,
we have also some fossile ???micro-meteorites??? found in Finland in
sandstone,
in Koylio, some 1,4 Ga old ??? These was found in 1960, then confimed as
meteorites by Geological Survey of Finland and Munster university in 1998.
Some ???120 micrometeorites??? was fo
Hi Teresa,
A search of Google provides a few asteroid/meteor cartoons:
http://www.science.uwaterloo.ca/earth/waton/f9912.html
http://www.cartoonstock.com/directory/m/meteor.asp
--Rob
__
Meteorite-list mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.pairlis
Pekka & The List,
I think we must use Monica Grady et. al. and the
recent 'Catalogue of Meteorites' as the definite authority
of what constitute a meteorite fall/find or not.
Brunflo and Osterplana is included in the Catalogue.
As seems to be indicated by other postings here, there are other
quarr
Hi Everybody!
I have listed some new ebay auctions today.
I will be adding some more tomorrow.
Have fun with them.
Here is the link:
http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/meteoriten/
Best Regards
Moritz Karl
Gutzkowstr. 77
60594 Frankfurt
Germany
www.m3t3orites.com
[EMA
Here we go, the billion dollar meteorite has appeared. This meteorite is a
chondrite, not a mars rock, nothing more. Great stone, not worth millions
much less $100,000. It looks like Park Forest all over again. I spoke to the
owner just now and have arranged a specimen to be classified. He is going
http://www.nola.com/news/t-p/index.ssf?/base/news-0/10651051640.xml
Millions of pennies from heaven
Meteorite may bring out-of-world payday
By Mark Schleifstein
nola.com (Louisiana)
October 2, 2003
The ugly chunk of tan rock that crashed through the Uptown home of Roy Fausset on
Sept. 2
Hi All!
I need your help once again! I am in the process of collecting
jokes, comic strips, etc. regarding meteors, meteorites, comets, and
space in general. I am wanting to use these materials in
presentations and workshops. If you know of any, would you please
send them to me or tell me w
Some older (1997) from the news-groups.
pekka s
From:
Keith Littleton
([EMAIL PROTECTED]
)
Subject: Re: News; 17 fossil meteorites in Sweden
Newsgroups:
talk.origins
Date: 1997/10/11
In Message-Id: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
[EMAIL
Hi Pekka and the list,
the fossile meteorites of Kinnekulle are very macroscopic.
I couldn't find a picture in the web, so I scanned a photo from a magazine.
(Sterne&Weltraum, 8/2003, p.15)
The meteorite there is about 8cm x 6cm / 3.15" x 2.36" and is looking like,
well, just as a an ordinary cho
Hi list.Just an update on our PF tour.Bob and I will be down there
tomorrow the 3rd instead of the 4th.So come down and join us if you can.I
will have my cell phone on, 1-847-804-8810.Feel free to call if you like.I
hope to see more people down there.
Right away, I compared the fireball pic with the S-A painting right away to see if it
might have been used as a template. I found almost no similarities between the two. I
also looked at the pixels of the fireball for any obvious artifacts, deliberate
dithering, aliasing, etc. and found none.
Hello,
This (below) is what Neil Bone, director of the meteor section of the
British Astr. Assoc. just wrote on IMO-news.
- Marco
- Original Message -
From: "Neil Bone" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> >Does anyone have more data on this daylight fireball? On the above
> >website, the date isn't ev
> It looks real, but then the front end of the fireball
> looks fake
That was also my first initial reaction, untill I also looked at the second
picture and thought it all over and slightly changed my mind.
As both Rob McNaught and me have pointed out on the meteorobs mailing list,
the first pict
Hmmm... Judging by the responses to this topic, Meteorites in Limestone,
roundish metallic things found in limestone and other sedimentary rock is
not extremely uncommon but worthy of further investigation. Especially when
found in layers or deposits corresponding with certain known time periods.
Hi,
there were found 55 fossile meteorites in limestone in five different
quarries in South Sweden,
more than 40 of them in the Thorsberg quarry in Kinnekulle.
The quarries a distributed in an area of 300 miles and the layers in that
limstone formed in a span of 2 million years 480 million years a
Dear all you mighty rusty shale ball collectors;
I went through the "wow, it's rusty meteorites" every where I went...for
yearsremember my list posts on the Cretaceous iron concretions
(circa '98)?
Let's get the nickel tests out, or send some out for an iridium test
before we harvest a few m
I found some iron oxide nodules, or 'spheres' in limestone in the
Caribbean. At a certain layer in coastal cliffs of limestone strata that
looked different (darker, coarser material with an underlying whitish
substance, there were iron nodules embedded in the limestone. You could
see them exposed i
Dear list- I have found a few iron oxide nodules in layers of Cambrien age
shale while digging trilobites in Nevada. I didn't think much of it at the
time. I'll have to dig them up from the garage and do a nickel test. It's
and interesting subject, and there are known meteorites recovered from
Hi, Robert,
The point of the Swedish paper was that at this geological period there
were a lot more meteorites in the limestone than there should be, based on
today's fall rate. There were so many more meteorites that the authors proposed
a period of intense meteorite falls, a veritable "rain
39 matches
Mail list logo