Seems like it wouldn't be too hard to put together a dual purpose trip to
the Bahamas...a free vacation courtesy of a business trip to teach some
baseball bat manners to a sleazy attorney.
Best,
JKG
At 05:02 PM 9/19/2006, R. N. Hartman wrote:
Here is our silly story:
One delivery of membran
Sterling:
And you wonder why some of us are concerned with the dynamical definitions for
planets. Most of us do not understand the models and even the dynamicists
cannot come to agreement.
Oh, something to remember, when things bump into each other early on, things
stick thanks to there being
Hello,
Am I the only one not getting any posts from the list again?
Can any of you guys let me know if this is a Comcast issue ? or is it more
widespread ?
Thanks
Bob
__
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pai
Well, guys and gals, after a summer of goofing off, it is time to get back
to work. I just got back from the Denver show on Sunday and had a great
time. Such a great time that with the exception of photos from my climbing
adventures with Blaine, I took no photos at the show. Sorry about that
On Tue, 19 Sep 2006 21:06:38 -0500, you wrote:
>
>All these high inclination objects have also provided
>a big boost to the "Sun's Companion Star" theories
>we all remember so well, like Nemesis. It still has its
>backers, and they're all elated. Of course, what they
>don't tell you is that yo
Hi List,Paul, and Jim,
I think that is a great idea! Seems that a Q&A on
metal detectors would be very interesting.
I just followed the link on John Tomlinson, and it
sounds like his is pretty knowledgeable on the
subject.
My Question is this. Aren't there are so many among us
that have an abun
Hi, E.P., List,
Yes, cometesimals - about 75 meters or so, which
themselves can then accrete chaotically over time,
Yes, but nobody thinks cometesimals contain
enough iron-nickel to form a differentiated body.
They may, but nobody believes it...
When I expressed a doubt about accretin
Dear List, Mike, Paul;
I bite, who is John Tomlinson.and why should he know a lot about
detectors for meteorites if we have not heard of his name in meteorite
circles..
Mike Miller would be a great topic leader on meteorite hunting with a
detector.
inquiring minds,
Dave F.
Mike Mi
Hi Mike,
Good question!
John's a really nice person and has been answering questions on some
of the forums.
The following link will introduce you to how he has acquired his
detector knowledge.
http://www.johnsmetaldetectors.com/about.htm
I didn't post John's link before because this post was
Hi Paul and list, first I have a silly question. Who is John
Tomlinson and why would he know a lot about detectors?
Then to answer the question, I have found more than a thousand
meteorites and 99 percent have been found with a Fisher Gold Bug 2. I
have found a couple with the old Gold Bug. Then i
Here is our silly story:
One delivery of membrane boxes from the factory in Europe to us in the U.S.
by FedEx consisted of 19 parcels ( about 3 cu. ft. ea.). They all arrived
at customs in Memphis, Tennessee. But then18 came to us in Califonia and
one was delivered to an attorney in the Bahamas
Check these little gems out.
I paid full retail for them, so the price is barely
over what I paid, but how often do you see these
little guys anymore?
Michael Farmer
Tomorrow, Tambo Quemado's, and Millbillillie's should
be up.
http://www.meteoriteguy.com/catalog/cameldonga.htm
MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Carolina Martinez 818-354-9382
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Preston Dyches 720-
The hunters in Patagonia have been busy this year. First an iron (See
Mike Farmers website) then a stone.
I have some great slices of the new Patagonian find provisionally
called"Cerro Mesa" L6 - possible fall
http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&ih=002&item=120033936613
the Lamesa (b) m
MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Guy Webster 818-354-6278
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Dwayne Brown/Erica Hupp 2
ition gave Opportunity a glimpse of the crater's
opposite wall. That view from the navigation camera on the
rover is available online at
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/mer/images/20060919.html .
"Opportunity has been heading toward Victoria for more than
20 months, with no guarantee it
"Which metal detector have you found the most meteorites with?"
A 180 degree PLUS hemispherically directional ground-balanced twin-lidded,
canvass-capped, water-cooled Jacob's membrane detection system made back in
the 60's, powered by a platypus, bananas, sandwiches and a thick head?
Seriously i
Dear List,
We are looking to see if the list would be interested in a Q&A
feature in Meteorite-Times on Metal Detectors.
We have a great source, John Tomlinson. We asked John if he would be
willing to answer questions from
list members to be posted in Meteorite-Times. John has agreed but we
Dear List,
A number of List members expressed an interest in meeting up in Mojave
Desert for the third annual Team LunarRock Mojave hunt last year but it was
cancelled due to logistics problems. I have been dreaming for over five
years now about setting up remote capabilities that would allow a gr
Hi Don, list -
Thanks for the information. I have regularly been
experiencing late delieveries with international
mailings of my book "Man and Impact in the Americas
when shipping via USPS, so this information is quite
important for me.
It's frustrating, but then what are the alternatives?
good
I did not order many meteorites from e.g. the United States lately, but
whenever I did in the more remote past within the last two years or so,
delivery was very very very slow - most probably due to German customs, as
others have already stated here. It is even likely to happen to be a slow
de
Dear listoids,
A few days ago i put a 722 grams Benguerir up for auction.
See picture here:
http://www.heavenlybodies.nl/mercurius/images3/benguerir-1z.jpg
And a 970 grams Plainview with Nininger number.
See pictures here:
http://www.heavenlybodies.nl/mercurius/images2/plainvfrontz.jpg
http://www
http://en.rian.ru/russia/20060919/54054760.html
Russia to launch craft to Mars, Phobos in 2009 - scientist
RIA Novosti
September 19, 2006
MOSCOW (RIA Novosti) - Russia will launch a spacecraft to
Phobos, the larger of Mars' two moons, in 2009, which will return to
Earth with a sample o
Hi Philippe,
What a great web page! I like the pictures of the meteorites and the
hunting story. Makes you want to go hunt the Sahara desert.
Sonny
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 5:49 AM
Subject: [meteorite-lis
Hi Mike,
Very nice site. Good work!
Sonny
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Tue, 19 Sep 2006 2:09 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite "Hammers" (AD)
Hi All,
About 7 years ago I stumbled upon a page in the web site o
Dear List Members,
I loaded some very special auctions this week, all started at just 99 cents
and they are due to end in a few hours regardless of value. You will find
several items that are worth well over $500.00 with no reserve and yes, I
started these out at just 99 cents also. I do this twic
--- "E.P. Grondine" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> But I am wondering, is UPS better?
Not particularly. A few years ago I bought a share of one of Michael
Cottingham's Moroccan investments. He sent a package of, I think it
was, about 5K of material UPS.
I was home the evening when they supposedl
Hi Sterling, list -
"but core-forming planetesimals all the way out in
Kuiper Belt?!"
Yes, cometissimals - about 75 meters or so, which
themselves can then accrete chaotically over time,
with the heavy elements always gravitationally
precipitating towards the center - the lighter
volatiles alway
Hi all -
I am greatly enjoying everyone's tales of woe with
government mail services - sharing the burden of a
frustration does make it lighter - sometimes there
really is nothing one can do but laugh.
But I am wondering, is UPS better?
good hunting,
Ed
--- Martin Horejsi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Very nice site. One more from Finland;
Haverö
Type ureilite, achondrite (AURE) Total mass A 1.544 kg single mass Time
of fall At 15.45 local time 2 August 1971. Location Haverö, Nauvo
Coordinates 60° 14' 44"N 22° 03' 43"E A singe stone fell throught roof
of equipment shelter of Noorback hou
VERY well done and a nice collection.
Michael L Blood wrote:
Hi All,
About 7 years ago I stumbled upon a page in the web site of Walter
Branch. The page was a listing of all meteorites reported to have struck
something when they fell to earth - some man made object, animal, or
even a hum
Dear Andreas Gren & list,
and what does all these stories teach us?
Meteorites NEVER prefer the straight way.
Matthias
- Original Message -
From: "Andreas Gren" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To:
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 2:07 PM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Unbelievably late package
Hi All,
Just a small message to indicate that I completely changed my Web
site. You will find more information and more photos.
Please look and all the comments are welcome.
Best wishes,
Philippe
http://www.meteoritica.com/
PS: I have also some auctions ending tonight on eBay http://
stor
Ok I have a story from Europe.
A customer in Italy bought a slice of Uruacu via e bay, three weeks later he
asked if his slice is already shipped, it was of course. So I have send a
second slice to the costumer. 10 days later I got an e mail , that both slices
arrived the same day in the post po
Walter
Sorry to hear that
I was at Denver on 9/11, and had to ship 5 boxes with stones (up to 20kg
each) back to Argentina.
I was afraid that they will be lost, but fortunately all arrived safe,
even more, they were some of the faster shipments I had. They took about
3 weeks for a surface shipm
Hello Michael,
nice page, very well documented. You can add 2 recent
falls to these :
- Alby-sur-Cheran (France) which fell into the roof of
a building : I've some content to send you
- Moss (Norway) which touched the roof of a building
Regards,
Pierre-Marie PELE
Good Morning Michael and list,
you should be excited about this site!
Nicely put together!
Great information!
Must have kept you up many nights! ;-)
Thank you for sharing,
Moni
From: Michael L Blood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Meteorite List
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite "Hammers" (AD
Hi Walter, and Martin,
not was it me.
It happened to Bernhard Rems from Austria. Well meanwhile he seems to have
been stolen in person too, as I wait since one and a half year for a payment
from him for a meteorite, sigh.
Well, perhaps I have also to explain, what usually happens with German
cust
Hi All,
About 7 years ago I stumbled upon a page in the web site of Walter
Branch. The page was a listing of all meteorites reported to have struck
something when they fell to earth - some man made object, animal, or
even a human being (such as the case of Sylacauga).
I immediately
Kangaroos are a bit faster! ;-)
Jeff
- Original Message -
From: Stefan Brandes
To: Meteorite-list
Sent: Tuesday, September 19, 2006 2:02 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Unbelievably late package
>One year seven and a half months for the package to cross the US. Who can
>beat that?
I
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