[meteorite-list] Lunar vs. Martian Meteorites
From: Gerald Flaherty <grf2_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue Oct 3 22:36:31 2006 Message-ID: <007a01c6e75d$d2688dc0$6402a8c0_at_Dell> Well said Bernd and credible to my unsophistocated leanings. Jerry Flaherty ----- Original Message ----- From: <bernd.pauli_at_paulinet.de> To: <Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Tuesday, October 03, 2006 2:09 PM Subject: [meteorite-list] Lunar vs. Martian Meteorites > Hello Listees and Listoids, > > There are twice as many lunar meteorites in my collection than martian > meteorites > and I've been asking myself several times why. We all know Mars is an > extremely > interesting celestial body, especially because it is a much better > candidate for the > existence of (microbial) life than, ... say Venus with its seething > temperatures and > rains of sulfuric acid or our celestial neighbor, the Moon, with its > tenuous atmosphere > that is virtually non-existant (compared to Earth's atmosphere). > > Here's my very personal answer: Long before I started collecting > meteorites, I used to > watch the starry sky with all its planets, stars, star clusters, galaxies, > nebulae, so > many other wondrous things, and, of course: the Moon, La Lune, Luna, der > Mond. > > Mars was seldom more than a tiny circular speck in my 8-inch Celestron > telescope. > There were moments - seconds - when the seeing was so steady that I was > able to > see the different hues and shades of planet Mars - a split-second later it > was > gone and nothing was left but a blurry, fuzzy image in my eyepiece :-( > > But whenever I point my telescope toward "la lune", it is always a true > feast for the > eyes (even in bad seeing!), a celestial banquet of sorts and I often feel > like delving > into the depths of lunar craters, rilles, flooded lava plains, rays, > domes, and so much > more. I've always enjoyed those subtle color shades - dazzling white, > light gray, dark > gray, the stark contrast between unlit crater-floors and their rims > bathing in glaring > sunlight and all kinds of delicate in-betweens of hues, especially on the > mare floors. > > Our Moon is much closer to me - both in distance and emotionally than > planet Mars and > it is an undescribable feeling of closeness, of nearness, of familiarness. > So, when I > look at my lunars, especially my latest "Moon" (Norbert, Martin A., > Stefan, and a few > others probably know which one I am talking about :-), when I hold it in > my hands while > watching its progenitor up in the sky, then I feel like greeting a good, > old friend so > far away and yet so near. > > Best wishes, > > Bernd > > > > ______________________________________________ > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list_at_meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Tue 03 Oct 2006 10:35:56 PM PDT |
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