[meteorite-list] tunguska explosion data
From: Robert Verish <bolidechaser_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 22 09:52:18 2004 Message-ID: <20020820055837.95239.qmail_at_web10405.mail.yahoo.com> Hello Alvie, I still think a closer look at the "meteorite" that you found would offer clues as to whether it is a surviver of a crater-producing impact, or merely a surviver of an aerial fragmentation event. Regards, Bob V. ----------------- Original Message ---------------- [meteorite-list] tunguska explosion data Dave Mouat dmouat_at_dri.edu Mon, 19 Aug 2002 16:59:09 -0700 Alvie Was the dry lake subsequently filled with sediment? If so, your meteorites might have a lot of overburden on them. If not, what would account for the very fine textured material in the lake bed? Dave alvie roach wrote: > Im trying to prove a dry lake is a meteorite crater. > A meteorite was found in the area, the bed rock > is shattered for miles in every direction and the > shape of the dry lake seemes to have a ballistic > signature.I am hopeful someone can help me access the > experiment data that determined the hight & angle of > the explosive event at tunguska.the discovery channel > had a program about tunguska.In this show was a > section on how the scientists determined the hight & > angle. They flew a series of charges over a forest of > pins on a test board and recorded the shapes left by > the explosions.They continued this until they came up > with the butterfly pattern of tunguska. I'm confident > the shape of my dry lake will be in this data.I hope > you can help me. > Contact me at, > <jiujitsu11_at_yahoo.com> > Thank you, > Alvie Roach > > __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? HotJobs - Search Thousands of New Jobs http://www.hotjobs.com Received on Tue 20 Aug 2002 01:58:37 AM PDT |
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