[meteorite-list] EBAY Slag for sale
From: Impactika at aol.com <Impactika_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 6 Jul 2007 15:35:37 EDT Message-ID: <d56.6ef2d9b.33bff389_at_aol.com> Colorado is very rich in slag too. For nearly a century CF & I operated a large smelter just south of Pueblo. There are still "hills" of slag all around it. And slag was found to be cheap and very practical to build the under-laying layers of roads and rail-road tracks, it is solid and does not shatter in winter. Result: it is everywhere! And I am regularly handed some at local mineral shows. Anne M. Black _www.IMPACTIKA.com_ (http://www.IMPACTIKA.com) _IMPACTIKA at aol.com_ (mailto:IMPACTIKA at aol.com) President, I.M.C.A. Inc. _www.IMCA.cc_ (http://www.IMCA.cc) ----------------------------------------------------------------------- In a message dated 7/6/2007 8:53:47 A.M. Mountain Daylight Time, korotev at wustl.edu writes: At 14:59 05-07-07 Thursday, STARSANDSCOPES at aol.com wrote: >I don't know why this slag tests positive for nickel, but it does! People have been making iron and disposing of the waste for several hundred years in this area and much of the US. The most common kinds of local meteorwrong I encounter are hematite nodules - iron ore - that weather out of the local limestone. This stuff has been used as feed stock for mom-and-pop iron smelting operations in the Ozarks since the 1800's. As Tom Phillips said, the processes were not as efficient as today, so a lot of iron metal was left behind. People have brought us all kinds of glassy stuff with metal in it, one of which even had the imprint of a bolt: http://meteorites.wustl.edu/meteorwrongs/m026.htm Two months ago a fellow came to my office with the ugliest 60-lb chunk of iron I've ever seen. He'd dug it up while "grub hoeing" in south St. Louis Co. There was no smooth surface, it was very rusty, and it was full of cavities. It didn't "look like" an iron meteorites to me, but I have no experience with iron meteorites that have been in the ground for 100's to 1000's of years, so I really don't know what to expect. In a post 2 months ago, Eric Twelker said "Those of us who are lucky enough to have hundreds or thousands of meteorites pass through our hands possess a store of knowledge that has real value to academics that haven?t had this experience." I agree, and I wish I had that knowledge! I neglected to get a photo of the thing. I did a quick nickel test, though, with one of those nickel allergy test kits and got a positive result*. So, I cut a piece off and analyzed it for the Fe, Ni, Co, Au, and Ir. Strange results: >Fe 89% >Ni 600 ppm >Co 62 ppm >Ir 1 ppb >Au 12 ppb The object cannot be a meteorite because the concentrations of Ni and Co are 100x too low for metal in any kind of meteorite. Yet, the concentrations of Ni, Co, Ir, and Au are all higher that I would expect for iron smelted from iron ore. More weird is that the relative concentrations of those elements (ratios) are not out of line for an iron meteorite. It's as though the metal is 1% iron meteorite and 99% pure iron. I don't know what this thing is. Similarly, a fellow from Colorado sent this photo and a small sample a couple of years ago: http://meteorites.wustl.edu/meteorwrongs/m122.htm It is also a a man-made piece of iron, but one with far more Ni and Co than in any iron oxide ore I've ever analyzed. >Fe 90% >Ni 2590 ppm >Co 131 ppm >Ir <14 ppb >Au 85 ppb I don't get it. Randy Korotev * Note that the dimethyl glyoxime [DMG] test for Ni is very sensitive. If it gives a positive result for 600 ppm Ni, then it is too sensitive to really be of much use in distinguishing meteoritic metal from terrestrial metal. A negative result should be helpful, however, if the test is done correctly.) ______________________________________________ Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list ************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com. Received on Fri 06 Jul 2007 03:35:37 PM PDT |
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