[meteorite-list] "Tucson Ring" Scam
From: Martin Horejsi <accretiondesk_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Jun 29 18:17:25 2006 Message-ID: <9c2f96d20606291517l79db1b86ife83ef9537b470a2_at_mail.gmail.com> Hi Geoff, Thanks for the warning. You know, with all the campos and beer flying around Tucson during Feburary, there is a chance that someone lost a campo off the roof of their car or something like that. Heck, I even accidently bought one the Blood auction, only to sell it minutes later when I realized I likley could not fly home with it. Anyway, I guess now we have to watch out for the Tucson Rong. Cheers, Martin On 6/29/06, Notkin <geoking_at_notkin.net> wrote: > Dear Listees: > > This is an alert regarding an alleged piece of the Tucson Ring, > currently being offered for sale. > > Some months ago, I was contacted by a lady here in Tucson, who stated > that a family member had found an iron meteorite nearby. She emailed me > a photo, and there was no doubt that it was the real thing. I went to > take a look in person. She claimed the ~3 kg iron had been found "near > Ryan Field" but, conveniently, couldn't remember exactly where. > Although it was clearly a genuine iron meteorite it was, in my opinion, > almost certainly a Campo del Cielo, and not a particularly nice one at > that. > > I remarked that the specimen had obviously been wire brushed, and it > was unlikely it had been found in that condition. With my loupe I > showed her parts of the original patina that remained in some crevices. > She stated that the iron had never been cleaned, and was just as it had > been found. > > I explained that the only way to do a positive ID would be to take her > iron to a recognized lab for analysis. The specimen was taken to the > meteorite department at the University of Arizona. A number of eminent > academics looked at it, and spent a great deal of time photographing > it, making a cast, etc., as the owner had given them permission to cut > it, once a cast had been made. The owner then changed her mind and said > she would not allow it to be cut. Only the "new owner" could have it > cut. > > Yesterday, she wrote to me again, saying "everyone [at U of A] thinks > this is a part of the Tucson Ring meteorite." She offered it to me at > $5,500. I telephoned U of A today and spoke with a friend who is > directly involved with this matter. I was very clearly told that nobody > at U of A believes this iron has anything to do with the Tucson Ring. > > In my opinion, this is misrepresentation at best, and an outright scam > at worst. As such I wanted to alert the collecting community in case > anyone is offered this specimen. It weighs 3,230 grams, and has a > flattish, tapered "scute" shape, typical of many old Campos. It is > bright silver (has been heavily wire brushed) and has small pits on the > surface, again similar to many "old" Campos. > > Anyone wishing further details, please feel free to contact me > off-list. I have not used any real names as this is a public forum. > > In this case, buyer beware. > > > Yours sincerely, > > Geoff > www.aerolite.org > > ______________________________________________ > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > Received on Thu 29 Jun 2006 06:17:21 PM PDT |
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