[meteorite-list] AL HAGGOUNIA 001 ("NOT" AUBRITE)
From: STARSANDSCOPES at aol.com <STARSANDSCOPES_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri, 30 Nov 2007 10:54:36 EST Message-ID: <ca1.1dad4582.34818c3c_at_aol.com> Hi list, I have been fascinated by the difficulty in identifying this meteorite find as an Aubrite, EL3, EL6, EL6/7 or EL7 (did I miss a few?), but what also has me amazed is the dispute on the "Fossil Meteorite" determination. I have noticed 4 material types in the just over 100 Kg I have. 1. The most common is the dark brown with occasional "Chondrules". This material looks dug up and I could believe it is matching the requirements for fossilized. This is just a shot from the hip based on appearance. 2. The Blue phase. This stuff also looks like it was dug up but the interior seems cleaner and less porris. On the big pieces it looks as if there is brown staining working it's way to the middle. Some are almost all blue and some are nearly all brown stained but interestingly enough, the blue phase stained brown does not look paired to the brown stuff (Category 1) on the microscope. This is just a personal observation and would be disputed by many so just chalk it up to yet an other "Shot from the hip". 3. The concretions. Real cool pink to apricot dense clumps cemented to chunks of blue phase or brown and a lot of what looks to be good old fashion dirt and rocks. 4. This is the most important group to the fossil question. The individuals! These are the ones collected on the surface with much of the features you would expect in an ordinary weathered meteorite. These do not look to be fossilized or even ever buried. The interior is often a consistent color with great density not full of weathered out holes. I know I will get killed on this one, but out of hundreds I have examined, I have a couple with remnant patches of crust. Not crusted like your prize collection meteorite but still crust. As I was witting this I felt silly so I dug out a prime example. I got to say it is a 3/4 inch patch of crust and not typical interior shock veins exposed to the exterior through time. This is not an other example called crusted just because of a dark color. I short, these individuals are found on the surface and do not look weathered out of soil/rock. Separated from the first three categories I have mentioned, I can not see these as resembling any thing "Fossilized". Tom Phillips **************************************Check out AOL's list of 2007's hottest products. (http://money.aol.com/special/hot-products-2007?NCID=aoltop00030000000001) Received on Fri 30 Nov 2007 10:54:36 AM PST |
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