To all,
The Potter Nebraska thin section and slice has been sold. Soon, there
will be a web site where other specimens and slides will be offered.
Steve Schoner
IMCA #4470
To all:
I am currently making thin sections after many months of learning the
process.
And now I offer a quality thin
Steve kindly wrote:
To all, The Potter Nebraska thin section and slice has been sold. Soon,
there will be a web site where other specimens and slides will be offered.
..hmmm?!? Now guess who might have acquired this thin section + those
1.2 grams of the material that the Potter TS has been
http://www.spacerocksinc.com/January_27.html
Hi Darren, Dirk, and List,
Two pieces, 14 and 42 grams, of this interesting, brecciated L6 Nebraska
chondrite with L5 components are in my collection. The 14-gram piece is
from Walter Zeitschel.
The 42-gram, cut individual is of special, personal
Hello Bernd, Darren Dirk, list
My own Potter 58.15 g full slice (crusted on edges) carries an old J.D.
Buddhue label, comes from Monnig coll. (M 24.2) and has the N° 476.17
(white numbers) painted on its edge.
I (unfortunately) doubt it comes from Dirk's source (sigh!) but I'll be
pleased to
Zelimir wrote:
My own Potter 58.15 g full slice (crusted on edges) carries an old
J.D. Buddhue label, ... I'll be pleased to know who Buddhue was
Hello Zelimir and List,
BUDDHUE J.D. (1957) The Oxidation and Weathering of Meteorites
(Univ. New Mexico Press, Albuquerque, New Mexico. 162 pp.).
Darren wrote the following based on Find a Falling Star, pgs. 117 and 118.
The Potter, Nebraska meteorite was found by farmer Cecil McKinney when
large
rocks were struck by his tractor. After digging several large masses from
his
field, because of their unusual density he used some of them
On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 10:43:20 -0600, you wrote:
Find a Falling Star was purchased in 1972, and was mostly written by Abbey.
This leads me to believe the newspaper article is likely more correct.
The details that I wrote up that disagreed with the Nininger book and the
article came from Dirk, so
On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 10:43:20 -0600, you wrote:
Darren wrote the following based on Find a Falling Star, pgs. 117 and 118.
This is the exact (excepting for typos made by me) text from Find a Falling Star
on the find:
One hot, windy summer day I sat down at a lunch counter in Sterling,
The details that I wrote up that disagreed with the Nininger book and the
article came from Dirk, so I suspect that they are more correct than either
of the above sources.
I do not see a disagreement with what you wrote and what is in Niningers
book. This leads me to suspect that Dirk is
On Sat, 27 Jan 2007 14:52:39 -0600, you wrote:
I do not see a disagreement with what you wrote and what is in Niningers
book. This leads me to suspect that Dirk is using FAFS as a reference. No
reference is noted so if I am wrong, please correct me Dirk.
The difference in the two accounts
Here's a link to the full-size photo of my Potter (it was way too big to put on
RFS as-is)
http://webpages.charter.net/garrison6328/temp/potter_nebraska_22g.jpg
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Here's a link to the full-size photo of my Potter (it was way too big to put on
RFS as-is)
http://webpages.charter.net/garrison6328/temp/potter_nebraska_22g.jpg
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probably its Nininger, my fragment arrive from
Nininger collection
Matteo
--- Zelimir Gabelica [EMAIL PROTECTED] ha
scritto:
Hello Bernd, Darren Dirk, list
My own Potter 58.15 g full slice (crusted on edges)
carries an old J.D.
Buddhue label, comes from Monnig coll. (M 24.2) and
has the
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