[meteorite-list] Thin Sections of Carancas Meteorite
From: Rob Matson <mojave_meteorites_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 7 Oct 2007 20:15:24 -0700 Message-ID: <GOEDJOCBMMEHLEFDHGMMCEADDGAA.mojave_meteorites_at_cox.net> Hi Sterling and List, > The INGEMMET report at: > http://www.ingemmet.gob.pe/paginas/pl01_quienes_somos.aspx?opcion=320 > contains photos of four of the meteorites and > three thin section photos, two of them polarized. > Text in English. People who understand thin > sections (not me) are invited to comment in > reply, please. This can't be the first time this report has been referenced on the Meteorite List, can it?! I've had this report for a week and a half, and indeed it was the "smoking gun" I was waiting for that converted me from a skeptic to a believer (and will eventually cost me a trio of beers in an international bet with a prominent MPML member ;-) As I pointed out on MPML, the exterior images were far from convincing (e.g. no fusion crust), but the plane- and crossed-polarized thin sections left little doubt (despite the nominal quality of the thin sections). My post on MPML from Sept. 27th: "I have uploaded to the files area a copy of the INGEMMET initial report on the ~possible~ Carancas Meteorite fall (07_09_21_Carancas_meteorite.pdf). In it on page 3, you can finally see some images of small samples of the purported stony meteorite. Better yet, on page 4 there are petrologic microscope images of a thin section under plane- and crossed-polarized light. "Based only on the images of the exteriors, I would consider the specimens very unlikely to be chondritic. But there ~are~ some chondrite- like features in the thin sections (though I wouldn't call them unambiguously chondrules). The rims are indistinct, there are no shock veins visible, and the interference colors don't seem quite right. I'll forward the images to a few experts to get their opinions, but if this is a chondrite, it would seem to be a metamorphised, highly brecciated one." --Rob Received on Sun 07 Oct 2007 11:15:24 PM PDT |
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