[meteorite-list] Re Firstone: Anything but impact, eh?

From: Andreas Gren <info_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 15 Dec 2007 00:43:42 +0100
Message-ID: <Y03718jBEMZdK7.RZmta_at_mo-p07-ob.rzone.de>

But when in the moment the spherules rain down a second impactor would bring
enough force to accelerate the spherules, than ....well, than this theory
could fit....
Andi



Hola E.P., All,

>Perhaps data from Barringer could throw more light on
the reentry of iron spherules from an iron ground
impact. I seem to remember frei-punkt, a maximum speed
for air entry.

Reentry of iron sperules? Maximum speed? With Canyon Diablo, they
condensed out of a cloud of vapour above the site of impact, no other
way. Spherules weren't moving quickly or anything like that - they
condensed, and fell primarily downwind of the crater, at, I would
assume, relatively low velocity and temperature - not quickly enough
or hot enough to penetrate bone, I'm sure.
Regards,
Jason.


On Dec 14, 2007 10:24 AM, E.P. Grondine <epgrondine at yahoo.com> wrote:
> Hi all -
>
> If one examines the C14 adjustment chart in the pdf,
> one notices the nice adjustment at 10,900 BCE.
>
> While I assembled some of the peoples' traditions
> which described COMET IMPACT and generally have been
> dumped on by many for suggesting that the peoples
> remembered what happened to them, Kenneth's recovery
> of impactites is pretty much is undeniable. Trying to
> remember through the haze here, but did Kenneth not
> also demonstrate comet related 3He samples?
>
> Given the C14 adjuctment at 10,900, is it possible
> that hyper-velocity impacts free binding forces, and
> that neutrons are released?
>
> Next question down this chain. If this is so, might
> such a process affect the results of some the standard
> tools used in examining meteoritic samples?
>
> Perhaps data from Barringer could throw more light on
> the reentry of iron spherules from an iron ground
> impact. I seem to remember frei-punkt, a maximum speed
> for air entry.
>
> That's my guess at what is being looked at, nothing
> more exotic than that. Where did these peppered tusks
> come from?
>
> PS - there was another major impact around 8,350 BCE
> which ended the paleo period.
>
> E.P. Grondine
> Man and Impact in the Americas
>
>
>
>
>
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Received on Fri 14 Dec 2007 06:43:42 PM PST


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