[meteorite-list] Alma College

From: cdtucson at cox.net <cdtucson_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 28 Jun 2010 15:58:08 -0400
Message-ID: <20100628155808.0LG3G.673242.imail_at_fed1rmwml4201>

Elton,
Being the proud owner of a small piece of Tagish lake I agree with you about the friability of that material.
 A better substitute for testing it's strength might be charcoal briquettes .
--
Carl or Debbie Esparza
Meteoritemax
---- MEM <mstreman53 at yahoo.com> wrote: 
> Most all of Tagish Lake( i.e. that which was not allowed to melt into the lake)--l which was recovered so to say, is easy to be had within the research community.  While it is distasteful to collectors it is not much surprise for them to use it.  TL, I would think,  is more friable than pumice so I can see wy they would select it.
> 
> I suspect the target pieces are almost completely pulverized.  I'd not be surprised to know it is discarded since it is unsuitable for retargeting.
> 
> Elton
> 
> 
> 
> 
> > Regarding Mr. Madjen's comment:
> 
> "A quote from this article:
> 
> "There   are plenty of meteorites available that have little or  no value-------"
> 
> If this is true, why do collectors pay big bucks for 
> > them?  I wonder what they do with the fragments!  Just asking folks!"
> 
> I have been interviewed by the press and seen comments in print 
> > that I swear I never made.  I suspect Dr. Strait was asked some sort of 
> > question about how she could stand to break apart meteorites and she said 
> > something along the lines of there are plenty of meteorites available that have 
> > little or no scientific value and that would be a true statement.  I've 
> > seen thin sections of some heavily weathered northwest African H5s and L6s that 
> > would add little to our scientific knowledge of chondrites.  Collectors do 
> > not pay big bucks for these meteorites as far as I know.  And as at least 
> > one sample was referred to a pumice-like, it tells me that Dr. Strait was 
> > struggling to explain what she was doing to a reporter that lacked the 
> > background knowledge to actually understand what Dr. Strait was saying.  
> > That sounds like a rough analogy that one uses to help someone understand what 
> > you are talking about.
> 
> As to what they do with the fragments, I don't 
> > know, but I suspect that at least some are analyzed carefully to see how and why 
> > they spalled off.  That is the point of the experiment -- to understand how 
> > to deal with an asteroid that is approaching Earth--what might work for a large 
> > chunk of metal might be completely useless if the asteroid is a C3 
> > chondrite.  It  might even make a difference is you look at an L3 vs. 
> > and L6 or a complicated breccia vs. a meteorite that appears relatively 
> > uniform.  Sooner or later we will spot an asteroid heading straight towards 
> > the Earth with sufficient time to act upon that information.  It would be 
> > extremely useful to know what would be the best way to prevent a 
> > catastrophe.
> 
> Melinda 
> > Hutson
> 
> 
> 
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Received on Mon 28 Jun 2010 03:58:08 PM PDT


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