Or NEO (175706) 1996 FG3 !
(MPOD 24 Oct 2011)
Kindest wishes
Doug
-Original Message-
From: lebofsky
To: aerubin
Cc: meteorite-list
Sent: Wed, May 2, 2012 11:47 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Asteroid Or Comet Sutters Mill
Hi Again:
One other place that seems to have abundant CM-
Hi Guys, great contributions;
Could we possibly be talking a 944 Hidalgo or something closer to an
(old friend of Larry) 733 Irmintraud ? Hidalgo specifically, Iis any
possible path from it that leads to an intersection with Earth ...
Hidalgo being historically a unicorn of a cometary/astero
Hi Again:
One other place that seems to have abundant CM-like material, the surface
of Vesta. There are dark areas on Vesta that seem to be composed of
carbonaceous chondritic material (based again on albedo and spectrum). I
do not know all of the details (missed some of the papers at the Lunar an
I have heard statements that this is the most important fall in American
history. It is interesting that in all this talk that the Murray Kentucky,
U.S.A., CM2 fall of 1950 has been overlooked. Over 12.6 Kilograms was
recovered from the Murray event and over 100 Kilograms from the Murchison,
A
CM chondrites are also ubiquitous. The most abundant foreign
component of the lunar soil is chemically similar to CM chondrites.
If i recall, many fireballs also seem to be CM like, although other
list members would be better able to address this point. More CM
chondrites would be in our
Hi Alan:
I would agree with you on the consensus that CMs would appear to come from
asteroids. Based on spectra and albedo, CM meteorites look like C-class
(and possibly several other low-albedo classes) asteroids (very common in
the Main Belt). These are asteroid that have surface compositions sh
From a private communication:
Robert Ward's piece was 2 stones fitting together, freshly broken. One
weighs 7g and the other 3g, for a total of 10g.
Anyway we can be absolutely sure that all those pieces being reported
by finders are trully meteoritic? no more asphalt?
Anne M. Black
www.IM
Hi Dr. Korotev and List,
As of right now, the approximate TKW stands at 226.72 grams from a
total of 28 finds.
I am receiving reports via email by the hour from people on the ground
in the strewnfield.
I would like to thank Mr. Mark Dayton and Dr. Peter Jenniskens for
their help in compiling thi
Greetings Bulletin Watchers,
There are 5 new approvals today, including a CO3 and 2 melt breccias.
Link -
http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meteor/index.php?sea=%2A&sfor=names&ants=&falls=&valids=&stype=contains&lrec=50&map=ge&browse=&country=All&srt=name&categ=All&mblist=All&rect=&phot=&snew=1&pnt=Normal
Hi List,
A couple of you have asked me about Robert Ward's finds in regards to
the Sutter's Mill find totals I have posted. I have heard conflicting
reports about his finds. Can someone please give me the correct find
total for him?
At first I heard he found two stones, each weighing approx. 10
MARS RECONNAISSANCE ORBITER HIRISE IMAGES
May 2, 2012
o Three Dust Devils
http://hirise.lpl.arizona.edu/ESP_025985_2160
There are also bright lines present, representing the tracks of
dust devils that have already passed through this region.
o Colorful Uplifted Rocks
http:
>>I hope/probably they miss quoted him?
I vote comet<<
I'd think if the parent body was cometary, it would had a faster entry
velocity and thus likely to explode at a higher elevation than the
approximate 5 miles I've been hearing. For it to not explode higher up, I'd be
surprised that t
Wondering if any dealers will be bring some Tissint for sale to Ensisheim.
Thanks!
tett
Mike Tettenborn
Owen Sound, Ontario, Canada
t...@rogers.com
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Thanks Rob, you helped me out a lot. When the meteor first entered the
atmosphere, I was hearing a variety of interpretations. The one that puzzled
me the most was a report that it had exploded over the town of
Snelling...which is about 20 or so miles northeast of Merced, CA.
GeoZay
In a
Hello list,
The local finder of a beautiful, oriented Sutter's Mill, CA meteorite
with flow lines and rollover lip has found (Tuesday) the missing piece
(4g) to the initial 11g stone which was found on Monday, for a total
weight of ~15g. The stones will now be sold together to the highest
bidder
I guess I've been goaded into responding.
First, at this point we don't know if the meteorite is a CM chondrite or
not. No meteorite researcher has completed an analysis of it yet (perhaps
tomorrow or Friday) and I have not seen a piece.
But, on the more general question of CM chondrites, most
Hi Everyone,
Recently I picked up a few meteorites that were lying around in an old store.
Among the more interesting pieces:
Macy - 11.5 gram ex- Glenn Huss slice - has his markings on it but no
original label: http://www.ebay.com/itm/380434534362
Taiban - 7.9 gram - Hard to find New Mexico L5
Hi Paul,
Probably not a misquote -- Dr. Jenniskens is interested in deciphering
the
nature of the original asteroid (meteoroid) body that produced the
meteorites. The original body was large enough that it may not have been
a monolithic body; as with 2008 TC3 (Almahata Sitta), the pre-encounter
bo
In the LA times article it reads in part:
We want to learn about this asteroid," said Peter Jenniskens, an astronomer
and senior research scientist at the Carl Sagan
Center at the SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence) Institute and
the NASA Lunar Science Institute. "This is scientific
Wow I had the honor to be there when that 100% complete and crusted 17 gram gem
was found. It was beautiful. And it still looked good after the rain and wet
soil that surrounded it. I was grateful to be part of the team that day. Btw
one veteran hunter left because he thought that we were too fa
Considering the stretch marks/tears on the top of the "egg" and the
rock fragments adhering to it I simply view the whole situation as one
micro "tar-baby"; don't touch it!
Happy hunting,
Brian
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Jake Schaefer gives it a direction of 272 degrees based on seismometer
data...
http://3dradar.wordpress.com/2012/04/22/canv-4222012-at-1556-utc/
Cheers,
Marc Fries
On 5/2/12 9:44 AM, Matson, Robert D. wrote:
Hi George,
Roughly east to west, based on the combination of radar returns and the
Hi All,
A friend just gave me a copy of the front page section of Monday's
Los Angeles Times. The Sutter's Mill fall made the front page --
above the fold, no less! In fact, Jason Utas appears (along with
Doug Klotz and Paul Guttmann) in a big color image at the top of
the front page! (Jason is a
As reported by the Sun:
http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/news/4284216/Egg-from-Mars-meteorite-Tissint-is-proof-of-life.html
-Michael in so. Cal.
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Hi Ruben!
I think there is one step that both you, and that article completely missed
regarding finding a meteorite:
Pure, unadulterated, dumb luck!
Ed;-)
- Original Message -
From: "Ruben Garcia"
To: "Meteorite List"
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2012 11:52 AM
Subject: [meteorit
Hi George,
Roughly east to west, based on the combination of radar returns and the
angle of the trajectory as seen in Lisa Warren's images. Additional
refinement needs to be done to determine whether the flight bearing
was toward slightly north of west or slightly south of west. (The
radar data su
Out of curiosity, can someone tell me which direction the meteor was
traveling that produced the Sutter Mill meteorites? Was it going roughly from
Coloma, Ca towards Rocklin, or the opposite? I never been able to get that
pinned down
GeoZay
Hi all,
Here's an article on the 5 steps to finding a meteorite!
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/05/02/meteorite-hunting-finding-space-rocks_n_1470494.html
I have always maintained it takes only two steps:
1. Go to where meteorites are likely to be found
2. Learn how to recognize a meteori
Does anyone have a piece of the Ysleta Iron El Paso County, Texas 1914 they
would pary with
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Amen to that Geoff!
orC'est la Vie!
David R Childs
- Original Message -
From: "Aerolite Business"
To: "IMCA List"
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2012 10:56 PM
Subject: Re: [IMCA] End of an Era - The California fall.
Dear Guido:
As a relative newcomer to the field I feel you are ba
I agree kudos to Team Girl Power, let's also give special attention to 4-year
old Lorraine, Teal, Sutter's Mill police officer Suzanne "Suzi", AND her mother
on a completely separate find in her own yard yesterday! :)
Best Regards,
Greg Hupe
On May 2, 2012, at 12:36 AM, "Paul Gessler" wrote:
Unknown female finder who contacted Randy Korotev - 4.26g stone
(authenticity?)
The woman who found the 4.26-g stone sent this message to me
yesterday after I passed on to her offers to purchase her stone from
some list members.
"I have decided to loan the piece to U.C. Davis, Dr. Yin,
wh
Hi Moni,
Way to go! Super find!
Sonny
-Original Message-
From: Paul Gessler
To: meteorite-list
Sent: Wed, May 2, 2012 12:30 am
Subject: [meteorite-list] GIRL POWER
Congrats Monica!Girls have Rocked this show. Paul
G__Visit the Archives a
Hi Listees,
I received an email today from Melchor, Guatemala at the Belize
border. A fireball complete with large detonation and earth trembles
just before 9:00 last night. It appears to have headed inland perhaps
towards the ruins at Tikal. This is an area (the Peten) that can make
Sutter's M
Sonny,
Good hunting with you up there, had a lot of fun! Looking forward to the
pictures of your stone and I still contend it is the best looking stone of
them all (so far). Just an awesome specimen!
Might also go back up soon.
Jim
Jim Wooddell
http://k7wfr.us
- Original Message -
Dear List,
The Norwegian Astronomical Socierty (NAS) has a mailing list running for
about 15 years. All kinds of questions, answers and discussions about
topics in astronomy and related fields pops up.
I'm sorry to say that knowledge about meteorites is not great, but then you
might say that is g
Test - ignore
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I think that's Bob Verish's cube!
Jim Wooddell
- Original Message -
From: "Paul Gessler"
To:
Sent: Tuesday, May 01, 2012 9:05 PM
Subject: [meteorite-list] The NASA big one Sutters Mill
http://newlynweatherview.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2012/04/sutters.jpg
Looks like around 20 gram
Yep Count, Sodom & Gomorrah.
No.
Old men say, benchmark won't be that fall, benchmark was already Tagish
Lake.
Had arrived then at a before totally unseen and strange price.
It happened after Tagish, that more and more observed falls were priced in a
way, which nobody believed to be possible. From
Today's Meteorite Picture of the Day: Uruacu
Contributed by: John Lutzon
http://www.tucsonmeteorites.com/mpod.asp
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Dear List Members and Friends of nice Thin Sections,
in arround 30 hours ends some new beautiful Thin Sections on ebay.
NWA 6383 Thin Section - very nice LL6 Breccia
http://www.ebay.com/itm/230782494168?ssPageName=STRK:MESELX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1558.l2649
NWA 6000 Thin Section - Achondrite Ho
Congrats Monika!
Girls have Rocked this show.
Brenda, Monika, Susan
Paul G
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Congrats Monica!
Girls have Rocked this show.
Paul G
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