[meteorite-list] Watson Australia image
From: Jeff Kuyken <info_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue May 16 06:40:16 2006 Message-ID: <006701c678d5$1e11fba0$6501a8c0_at_mandin4f89ypwu> G'day Elton, I don't know if you've seen it already but there was an interesting abstract written on Watson in 1994. If anyone is interested, here's the link. http://adsabs.harvard.edu/abs/1994Metic..29..200O Cheers, Jeff ----- Original Message ----- From: Elton Jones To: mmorgan_at_mhmeteorites.com Cc: Meteorite-List Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2006 1:13 PM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Watson Australia image Hello Matt, Your message was lost in cyberspace a while so my question is going back a few weeks. This is an amazing meteorite with a some complicated history. Watson clearly looks disrupted-- in chunks no less-- the orientations of the crystal latices have been jumbled. Some of those look like they have been remixed and regrown briefly. Others are too course to have grown in a small body in a short time, suggesting they are original. Conventional wisdom is that a melt would cause the taenite and kamacite to remix. However this would not necessarily be so as this specimen seems to indicate. Seems in a full remelt, the lattices would be realigned throughout the mass and of consistent size. I see several bent laminae and near the tip of the chondritic inclusion are intermixed lobes, which suggest to me that this deformation was produced by an extrusion/ductile process versus a melt. This is remarkable in that a chondritic "slug" was embedded in the iron. So I then mused to myself how do you shoot a slug of H-chondritic meteorite into an iron mass and fail to turn it into glass. I don't think you can. I surmise this is a case of the iron parent deforming over/through the silicate parent and this slug was pinched off as the iron barreled through the silicate, folding in behind it. Questions for you or the list. Are there any other published or unpublished theories as to its history? Has anyone ever discussed the occurrence of a "brecciated" iron? Are there any other irons that have a similar brecciated appearance? and in the "How many angels can dance on the head of a pin?" Category... Does this H-clast meet the criteria to be a separatley named meteorite? Thanks for posting I find it facinating. Elton Matt Morgan wrote: > Some of you who collect irons may enjoy this pic of Watson, Australia, > type IIE with an H-chondrite clast. > This piece came from Robert Haag collection and was just refinished. > It is a really interesting meteorite! > Matt Morgan > > <http://www.mhmeteorites.com/images/watson.jpg> > > Close-up of clast and etch. > <http://www.mhmeteorites.com/images/watson_close.jpg> > ______________________________________________ Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Tue 16 May 2006 06:40:11 AM PDT |
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