Michael G. wrote:
I have to agree - I overlooked the obvious date,
which is a few years too early for NWA.
1994 is not at all too early for NWAs. The first meteorites
from the NWA dense collection areas were found as early as
1989. Here are some examples:
1989 - meteorites from the Açfer area
Not to mention there is enough iron in our lava that using a metal detector
(unless you are very good at calibration) is yet another exercise in futility.
Unless you have evidence of where it landed, meteorite hunting in HI is hard.
And the Palolo Valley fall disappeared from Bishop Museum!
I'll make it short and sweet - FOR SALE:
Zulu Queen, 20.6g, L3.7 (FULL SLICE)
ex. Jim Schwade - Jay Piatek
Pieces of Zulu Queen do not come up for sale often and this is a RARE
one with a TKW of only 200g and I have never seen a full slice other
than this one.
$3000 cash or $3100 by PayPal
Will
CATCH A SHOOTING STAR
Hi All,
I am thrilled to be involved in this exciting project and i hope it
inspires many others.
The British and Irish Meteorite Society are working with Dr Richard
Greenwood and others at the Open University in the UK to set up an an
educational interactive display about
Hello Listers
Well if a meteorite fell by me, I would pick it up :)
Enjoy
Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633
ebay store http://www.ebay.com/sch/imca1633ny/m.html
Website http://meteoritefalls.com
What Happens When Meteors Hit the Earth? Excerpt from Meteorites by
Ronnie McKenzie
Namibiana Buchdepot has
List,
I recently ran a search on my DVR for any programs dealing with the word
meteorite. One of the hits I got was for an episode of the 1965 season of
Death Valley Days entitled Canary Harris vs. The Almighty, which I just
watched. The episode was introduced by Ronald Reagan, the last
Today's Meteorite Picture of the Day: Baszkówka
Contributed by: Pawel Zareba
http://www.tucsonmeteorites.com/mpodmain.asp?DD=01/30/2015
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