[meteorite-list] What makes a hammer a hammer?

From: Dave Gheesling <dave_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 3 Jan 2009 21:46:37 -0500
Message-ID: <028FBF99A96243D9B49C0E9DC67A70B1_at_meteorroom>

Hi, Steve,
Well, pardon my ignorance, and I stand corrected. Apparently quickly picked
a bad example, as I'm familiar with slices in private circulation that
aren't as you described. That said, I am familiar with some material which
is exactly as you've described it, so that makes sense. Anyway, hopefully
the concept came through even though the example was a poor choice. How
about Mbale?
All best, and Happy New Year,
Dave
www.fallingrocks.com

-----Original Message-----
From: MeteorHntr at aol.com [mailto:MeteorHntr at aol.com]
Sent: Saturday, January 03, 2009 9:04 PM
To: dave at fallingrocks.com; cynapse at charter.net;
meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] What makes a hammer a hammer?

In a message dated 1/3/2009 7:56:11 P.M. Central Standard Time,
dave at fallingrocks.com writes:
Sylacauga is a wonderful story,
but the material available to collectors didn't hit Mrs. Hodges on the hip.

Dave,

In 1999 I brokered a couple of pieces of Sylacaga from the King Collection
that did indeed come from the stone that hit Mrs. Hodges. It came from a
core
sample taken from that very stone. Somehow Dr. King talked them (the local

library or museum) into taking a small core sample from it, maybe he
traded them some Allende for it.

I think most of what is on the market of Sylacaga came from the King piece,
but check the provenance. If the slices are round, or partially round on
one edge, it is probably from that core piece.

Steve Arnold #1

**************New year...new news. Be the first to know what is making
headlines. (http://www.aol.com/?ncid=emlcntaolcom00000026)
Received on Sat 03 Jan 2009 09:46:37 PM PST


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