[meteorite-list] What's this? -for the geology experts out there
From: mark ford <markf_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 7 08:05:54 2005 Message-ID: <6CE3EEEFE92F4B4085B0E086B2941B31244F0F_at_s-southern01.s-southern.com> Nice pics. A Classic illustration of why classification is so very important! Especially with Martian and Lunar Material... Best, Mark -----Original Message----- From: Robert Verish [mailto:bolidechaser_at_yahoo.com] Sent: Thursday, April 07, 2005 1:01 PM To: voltage_at_telus.net Cc: Meteorite-list Meteoritecentral Subject: [meteorite-list] What's this? -for the geology experts out there Hello Brother Graham and List, http://marzmeteorite.tripod.com/mars-rocks/2mars1not.jpg As you can tell from the above image, Brother Graham and I belong to the same fraternity - The Fraternal Order of Green Rock Picker-Uppers. And here is an "in-situ" image showing where I found my green rock: http://marzmeteorite.tripod.com/mars-rocks/MRF04996.jpg Actually, Graham, my story is much shorter than yours. I found my little shergo-not just last week, and only a few miles from my backyard. It was still sitting on top of my monitor when I read your message and saw your great looking image. It prompted me to share my image with you. And, as in your image, I placed a small slice of DaG 476 in front of my Mars-wannabe. For added effect, I placed a larger slice of the DaG 670 stone to the right of my m-wrong. As a rule, I don't "hazard a guess" about a rock-type based solely on an image. Too many times I've had to change my opinion about a rock-type after examining a cut surface. So, if you show me the inside of your rock, I'll show you the inside of my rock! ;-) It's true. I haven't cut my little rock, yet. And to be truthful, I haven't had it examined by an "expert", so I can't say with 100% certainty that my rock is a "shergo-not". Wouldn't I be emabarassed if I was wrong, and my "wrong" wasn't? Bob V. --------------- Original Message ---------------- [meteorite-list] What's this? -for the geology experts out there Graham Christensen voltage at telus.net Thu Apr 7 05:21:16 EDT 2005 Hello list I've had this rock sitting on my kitchen table since last year when I picked it up along the side of the road while out for a walk. It is a fairly smooth green rock with black bits in it and it looks somewhat like my DAG 476 shergottite but it's a slightly lighter shade of green. I have yet to grind an end off to see what the inside looks like but there are a couple chips out of it and it looks about the same on the inside with the green part being fine grained and the black bits are individual crystals. I doubt that it is meteoritic (there is no trace of fusion crust) but I was wondering if it might be similar to a shergottite but of terrestrial origin. Here is a pic of it: http://www.geocities.com/aerolitehunter/dag476andunidentified.jpg The small slice in the forground is my DAG 476 and the big rock is of course the rock in question. I have been collecting rocks on and off in this area since I was a kid and I haven't seen anything like it but that doesn't mean much. I live in Alberta, Canada, where most of the rocks you find lying on the ground were brought down from various locations by the glaciers of the last ice age so it's kind of a potluck dinner of geology up here. I won't get my hopes up, but I certainly wouldn't mind copying Bob Verish and finding out I've been sitting on a mars meteorite for a year!! :-) Any comments are greatly appreciated Graham ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________ Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Thu 07 Apr 2005 08:04:33 AM PDT |
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