[meteorite-list] Hadeeda Craters
From: Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 6 10:03:32 2006 Message-ID: <006f01c65945$e9b4e600$50342b41_at_ATARIENGINE> Hi, Kevin, There are various transcriptions from the Arabic, including Hadid and Um-Hadid. It os often listed as one of the Wabar craters: "Um-Hadid 0.01 km. Mentioned in CoM 1985: "...found in region of the Wabar crater." Silica glass and weathered fragments of iron meteorites (largest 1kg) found. Coordinates give in CoM: 21?30'N, 50?40'E approximately. See F. El-Baz and A. El Goresy, Meteoritics, vol.6, p.265, 1971." ARN says: Um-Hadid....................................21'41'42' N., 50'35'48' E. Rub'al Khali, Saudi Arabia Found Stony-iron. Mesosiderite (MES). Oxidized fragments up to 1kg in weight were found associated with a crater 10 metres in diameter 15.4kg collected . And so forth. It's not well-documented. Try Googling Um-Hadid. Sterling K. Webb ------------------------------------------------------------------- ----- Original Message ----- From: "Kevin Forbes" <vk3ukf_at_hotmail.com> To: <Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Wednesday, April 05, 2006 9:14 PM Subject: [meteorite-list] Hadeeda Craters > > > Hello list, > > Anyone have any more info on this crater complex. > > There are only three mentions on google. > > http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1§ion=0&article=79071&d=12&m=3&y=2006 > > (snip) > > > He told the audience that it offered numerous possibilities for future > research. He said that parts of Saudi Arabia had been much wetter in early > times and there was a thriving Savannah where now there was sand. > > "The lakes and water tables that remain should be studied in order to > reconstruct the history of the climate and then project it forward to > enable us to understand how this area will develop in the future." > > The expedition visited the Hadeeda Craters - site of a famous meteor > impact - in the southwestern Al-Rub Al-Khali. Professor Matter said that > samples of the meteorite were being sold on the Internet for considerable > sums to collectors. > > Drawing on his experience with meteor fragments in Oman where he set up a > program to recover fragments from the desert, he said that the program had > recovered meteorite fragments from the moon and even one from Mars. > Collectors though, he said, had robbed the desert of its heritage simply > for money and not for scientific research. > > The Al-Rub Al-Khali showed indications of considerable groundwater water > resources, said Professor Muhammad Sultan of Western Michigan University. > "We have to do our homework and to establish its whereabouts and how much > we can take out of it so that we can set up sustainable development of > this area. We have a lot of work ahead of us, but we are on the right > track." > > Received on Thu 06 Apr 2006 02:47:02 AM PDT |
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