[meteorite-list] M.C.'s Babb's Mill (Blake's Iron) on EBay
From: bernd.pauli at paulinet.de <bernd.pauli_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: 04 Feb 2008 20:12:36 UT Message-ID: <DIIE.000000B90000266A_at_paulinet.de> Hello All, Here is another American classic I couldn't resist yesterday. Well, I had been watching it for several days already and I had tried to ignore it after I had recently bought a 0.95-gram partly crusted SNC individual from Marcin and that terrific SNC slice I got on Ebay from Jim Strope. See here if you haven't seen it yet: http://www.rocksfromspace.org/January_19_2008.html In vain did I try to ignore Babb's Mill, which is also known as Blake's Iron and not to be confounded with Babb's Mill (Troost's Iron). I had read so often about these two ataxites, I had seen a picture of the cigar-shaped main mass of Blake's Iron in one of my very first books on meteorites (Heide's Kleine Meteoritenkunde, 1957, p. 80) that I did not want to miss out on an iron I have never before seen offered (if I remember correctly) since I started collecting meteorites about 25 years ago. Babb's Mill (Blake's Iron) has a nickel content of 11.8% Ni whereas Troost's is richer in nickel (17.5%). As the meter-long cigar-shaped mass of Blake's Iron had been dug up not far from Troost's Iron and as they are both of them ataxites, Brezina assumed they were one and the same iron. Maybe Christian or Alex can post a picture of this "cigar" which now resides in the Vienna collection (weight: 128.7 kg). The German meteoriticist E. Cohen [hence the name "cohenite" for the carbide (Fe, Ni)3C] and his coworkers were the first to notice there was a noticeable difference between both irons in nickel content. Berwerth (1918) even concluded that Blake's Iron was an artificial product and thus not meteoritic. But Vagn Buchwald restored its good reputation and showed that Blake's Iron was definitely of cosmic origin (and completely different from Troost's Iron). According to Buchwald, "etched sections display an homogeneous ataxitic structure without visible inclusions of troilite, schreibersite, graphite or silicates" and "high magnification reveals a polycrystalline mosaic of kamacite and taenite grains." But, why don't you look for yourselves if interested. There are still 3 specimens that Michael Cottingham is offering on EBay. My 0.45-gram slice should now be on its way across the Big Pond. Reference: BUCHWALD V.F. (1975) Handbook of Iron Meteorites, Volume 2, pp. 284-285. Ataxitically yours, Bernd Received on Mon 04 Feb 2008 03:12:36 PM PST |
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