Here is the price list for all slices, all finished on both sides.
1627 grams $975.00
2140 grams $1285.00
2564 grams $1540.00
2512 grams $1500.00
2735 grams $1640.00
2635 grams $1580.00
I have 8 total pieces,
1,996 gram partslices. Measures 235 mm x 190 mm x 10 mm
http://meteoriteguy.com/
Hi list, I was recently able to borrow a thin section of NWA 4905, the
Basaltic Eucrite. I am very happy with the microscope images I took and I
plan
to use them in the next issue of Meteorite Times.
I am unable to find much more information on this material that isn't
already written on
Hi list.Things have moving so well I thought I would make the remaining items
40% off thru monday.Shipping is extra.View here at chicagometeorites.net/ and
thanks.
Steve R.Arnold No#1!,Chicago!
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http://www.meteoritecentral.com
Meteorite-
Hola Elton.Thanks for your reply. We took some close up pictures of this
specular hematite nodule ( a meteorwrong )...so you can have a better idea of
how it looks like :
http://inlinethumb10.webshots.com/44105/2089588630100862759S600x600Q85.jpg
http://inlinethumb55.webshots.com/42422/222930
"Masses range from 1.5 g to 283 g, spread for 29km along the approach path in a
manner expected for debris from 2008 TC3"
A strewn field 29km long? Surely they haven't found everything in that. Get
out there, guys!
__
http://www.meteoritecentral.com
M
In response to so many requests for photos, I was able to get quick pics of a
couple of the slices.
I have 9 total pieces,
1,996 gram partslices. Measures 235 mm x 190 mm x 10 mm
http://meteoriteguy.com/ebayauctionstockphotos/nantan1996.JPG
You can see the many triolite nodules and absolutely
Hello List,
Sorry if anyone gets this twice - I did not get a copy in my email as I
usually do.
Does anyone know of any R4 that is paired with Ouzina? Or if any additional
pieces were found? I am interested in knowing if the original 642 gram TKW
still stands.
Thanks much!
Ed
It is just that those are high humidity places and not optimum for these
slices.
Michael Farmer
Sent from my iPhone
Michael
On Mar 26, 2009, at 6:02 PM, Matthias Bärmann wrote:
- Original Message - From: "Michael Farmer"
To:
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2009 1:55 AM
Subject: [meteorit
I'd ask for my money back!!! lol You've ruled out mica and that is good. If it
were mica it is immediate proof that this isn't a meteorite. Google up:
"specular hematite". See where that takes you.
Had it been magnetic and not so shinny, I would have considered this a possible
separation alon
- Original Message -
From: "Michael Farmer"
To:
Sent: Friday, March 27, 2009 1:55 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Ad: LARGE Nantan slices.
Farmer wrote:
"places except Germany or Florida!"
I waited a lifetime to recognize this as an alternative :-)))
Matthias
Helloe everyone,
I am back home again, after a short vacation in Las Vegas with my wife who I
have not seen in months!
I just got a shipment of fantastic large Nantan partslices, I am talking
multi-kilo slices!
I will be offering these up for sale tomorrow, as it is too late today to get
a
Hola again, Göran. We did some search...and it is possibly a specular hematite
nodule.It surely comes from the Saharan deserts. In the search, could not find
a similar rounded nodule of specular hematiteit must be a very old one for
its wheathered and eroded nature.BTW.NASA has an old a
Hi all:
I know that Rich Kolwalski slept through most of the initial excitement
after he reported the discovery of 2008 TC3 to the Minor Planet Center,
but I would not consider him automated!
Larry
>
>
> Public Affairs
> Sandia National Laboratories
>
> Media contact:
> Neal Singer, (505) 845-70
More pictures of Almahata Sitta
http://www.universetoday.com/2009/03/25/meteorites-found-in-africa-from-first-predicted-asteroid-hit/
Carl Esparza
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http://
Phil, Hmmm Yeah, but I'm still not so sure. It is close.
The gray-green or blue crackly crust is very similar but there's not
many high resolution photos of the Sahara 03500 crust. I have an
oriented piece that I think might be of the same material on my site.
Problem is it's oriented so I
Hi all -
I suppose that when we start to get decent IR images, this will be used to
explain the "dark comets", i.l. the dead comet fragments. Rationalizations work
in strange ways
E.P. Grondine
Man and Impact in the Americas
__
http://www.m
I would guess a metamorph diabase heavily weathered. It could also be a
sedimentary rock of some kind, hard to tell without having a piece of it
in my hand. Nothing interesting, put it in the garden.
If it was laying on top of the snow it couldn't have come from the sky.
I would have either sh
http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2009/26mar_marsroverupdate.htm
Mars Rover Update
NASA Science News
03.26.2009
March 26, 2009: In January 2004, NASA landed two identical robotic
rovers named Spirit and Opportunity on the surface of Mars. The twins
were primed for a brief 3-month mission to tel
- Original Message -
From: "PSRD"
To:
Sent: Wednesday, March 25, 2009 12:56 PM
Subject: New Issue: Lunar Magma Ocean Solidification
Announcement from Planetary Science Research Discoveries [PSRD]
New article online: Time to Solidify an Ocean of Magma
--A small mineral grain place
Yes actually but I'll let you decide when and where to announce it if we are
right.
Elton
--- On Thu, 3/26/09, Meteorites USA wrote:
> From: Meteorites USA
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Odd meteorite.
> To: "meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com"
>
> Date: Thursday, March 26, 2009, 2:05 PM
> A
Hi list,
I was doing a Google search on fireballs and came across a number of
articles on a bolide over the South Carolina / Georgia area on the
20th. On the AMS fireball sightings log there were almost 80 sightings
and most of them had an accompanying boom. One of the articles is
about Ruben Garc
I am new to this list and rock collecting in general. This is my
first experience trying to pin down whether a rock is a meteor or
not. I must say, the experience is quite engrossing!
I realize my "find" is not likely a meteorite, but it is large enough
that it seemed worthwhile to spend s
Dear Ron, List,
Interesting story.
It is said that Almahata Sitta is a fragile, porous olivine and
pyroxene-bearing ureilite. Although said to be generally coarse-grained,
ureilites (major olivine, minor pyroxene-pigeonite embedded in a dark
carbon-rich matrix) are rarely porous.
I believe th
Anyone have a clue? http://www.meteoritesusa.com/odd-meteorite.htm
Photos, links and articles on other meteorites similar to this would be
greatly appreciated.
Specifically I'm looking for info on SPECIMEN #UNWA001
You can reach me at: 904-236-5394 or contact via email...
Thanks!
--
Regards
Hola Göran. It was sent to us as a meteorite. Following your advicewe get
our neomagnetand put it close to the stone.result : the stone did not
stick to itso.your guess point to the right direction. Tonight we will
sand a window to see its matrix. Thanks in advance.
Hasta
http://www.spaceflightnow.com/news/n0903/24marswater/
Mars water story spawns kudos and controversy
BY CRAIG COVAULT
SPACEFLIGHT NOW
March 24, 2009
HOUSTON -- Phoenix science team findings that their spacecraft
discovered liquid water on the surface of Mars sailed through their
first scientific
MARS RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER HIRISE IMAGES
March 25, 2009
o Gullies on Pole-Facing Slope and Arcuate Ridges on Crater Floor
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ESP_011995_1410
o The Answer is Blowing in the Wind
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ESP_011934_0945
o Starburst Spider
http://hirise.lp
Public Affairs
Sandia National Laboratories
Media contact:
Neal Singer, (505) 845-7078
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 25, 2009
We saw it coming: Asteroid monitored from outer space to ground impact
Sandians Mark Boslough and Dick Spalding watch it in real time
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. -- Reports by s
Carnegie Institution of Washington
Washington, D.C.
Contact:
Douglas Rumble, 202-478-8990
March 25, 2009
Asteroid Impact Helps Trace Meteorite Origins
The car-sized asteroid that exploded above the Nubian Desert last October
was small compared to the dinosaur-killing, civilization-ending obje
Are you sure it is a meteorite? It could be a hematite concretion or
some other earth mineral. The fact that it is heavier than an ordinary
stone but doesn't affect the compass needle sounds like some hematite
iron ore. Hematite could develop mica-like structures.
Göran
gian gallo wrote:
While searching for audio of yesterday's teleconference, I found this 5 part
lecture video on Youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_type=videos&search_query=Asteroid+2008+TC3&search_sort=video_date_uploaded
__
http://www.meteoritecentral.com
Met
With all due respect to George Zimmer, it's: "You're gonna like what you get. I
Guarantee it."
Your post should have read: "Hi this is Steve Arnold #2,founder and CEO of
chicagometeorites.net.I know I post a lot of ads to the met-list,but hey,I
love Red Bull.If anyone has a 300+ gram orie
Hello again list.I know,I know, I email to much about my sale and freebies.I
have 5 final freebies to givaway.If you were one of the ones to buy and get a
freebie,I will just stick it in your box.Shipping will be $5 priority mail.I
have 5 left and you can decided what you want when you chime in
Hello list members, I hope everyone is having a Great week!
I have several nice meteorites listed on ebay and ending tonight through the
rest of the week. Hassayampa, Cocklebiddy and 2 McKinney are up for auction.
Please have a look.
Thanks,
Brian Cox
IMCA # 6387
searchingforfun =ebay user id
An article in journal of Geophysical Research disputes
the origin of the what has been called the “Sirente crater”.
The paper discussing this theory is:
Speranza, F., I. Nicolosi, N. Ricchetti, G. Etiope, P. Rochette,
L. Sagnotti, R. De Ritis, and M. Chiappini (2009), The
“Sirente crater fiel
I sale 2 pieces of Alfianello for low price, its a end piece
of 20.4 grams for 800,00 euro and a slice of 19.7 grams for
900,00 with copy of old labels. For who is interested
contact me
Matteo
M come Meteorite Meteoriti
i...@mcomemeteorite.it
http://www.mcomemeteorite.it
http://www.mcomemeteor
You beat me to it Darren! ;-) That was going to be my example too. Some
meteoroids do enter and exit the atmosphere again ("Earth Grazing") so there
would be some out there with fusion crust.
For anyone that hasn't seen the Grand Teton fireball, it's worth seeing:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Hello Larry, I was the one that put "dust bunnies" in the discussion mix
whilst discussion space weathering color changes to meteoroids.
I was using it generically and did not limit it to particles which were neutral
in charge and gravitationaly emplaced. I was thinking in terms that there a
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