[meteorite-list] Name of Texas Fall: Ash Creek
From: Linton Rohr <lintonius_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu, 16 Apr 2009 18:26:19 -0700 Message-ID: <3413CAA98A224F7DA7F4D75E12262F4B_at_D190TH71> Jerry, It's good to hear from a resident of west Texas. I appreciate your point of view. And your place of residence. Having grown accustomed to the unofficial name, I believe I can adjust with no serious side effects. My specimen cards (and those of most others) have a line for... Specimen name: (Ash Creek) and... Location of find/fall: (West, Texas). I believe that does it. ;^) Linton ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jerry A. Wallace" <jwal2000 at swbell.net> To: "MeteoriteCentral" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> Sent: Thursday, April 16, 2009 5:52 PM Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Name of Texas Fall: Ash Creek > Hi Dr. Jeff and List, > > I, for one, am tickled that the "WEST", Texas fall has been officially > named anything but "WEST". > > Years ago I became aware of the methods and criteria used by the > Nomenclature Committee for > naming any new fall or find. So it was obvious that the name WEST was > premature. > > The first email I received about someone actually finding a piece of the > fall (may have been Sonny- I > don't remember) stated that it was found near WEST TEXAS. Well now, by > gum, that name takes > in a huge geographical area. Having lived in Odessa for many years, I > have always heard our area > termed WEST TEXAS. And it is...WEST TEXAS. I have always, arbitrarily, > thought of the western > part of Texas as starting around Abilene or thereabouts. A lot of folks > for many years have declared > that Ft. Worth is "Where the west begins". Who am I to argue. West Texas > officially ends just west > of El Paso. It has to in that New Mexico starts there. So using Ft. > Worth as a starting point (going > west) and ending the trip in El Paso, we have now covered about 603 > miles and are still a skosh > away from the New Mexico border. If we start the trip from Abilene we'll > be covering over 455 > miles. I believe Darren might declare that distance to be at least an > OODLE of miles, may even stretch > into the next unit of measurement. I won't even go into what constitutes > the southern and northern > boundaries of what is considered "WEST TEXAS", but there are some > impressive distances there too. > > Most everyone who lives in the great state of Texas think of the western > part of Texas when they hear > the term WEST TEXAS. And that's a big place. > > So now you can possibly understand that every time I heard the name WEST > TEXAS (and frequently > written without the distinction and clarification of even a comma > between the words) applied to the fall > I was immediately disconcerted, discombobulated, confused, and > bewildered. Contrary to popular > opinion that is really not my normal state of mind. > > HAIL to the new meteorite ASH CREEK. Welcome aboard into the > multitudinous family of existing Texas > meteorites, the ones that had the good sense to aim for our great state. > They knew they would be properly > appreciated and cared for here. Watch for my new book "The Care and > Feeding of Texas Meteorites", > scheduled to be on the bookstore bookshelves any time now. > > It would be greatly appreciated if any of you foreigners (anyone who > doesn't live in Texas) who are in > possession of any of our fine Texas meteorites please send them home. > Just write for the correct address > to mail them to. Or sending them home to Dr. Art Ehlmann at the Monnig > Museum would be a good starting > point. We can work out the distribution details later. > > Best regards from west Texas, not West, Texas, > > Jerry > > > > Jeff Grossman wrote: >> I just wanted everybody on the list to know that the Nomenclature >> Committee has approved the name of the recent fall near West, Texas. >> It will have the official name "Ash Creek". See this and 38 other >> recent approvals at: >> http://tin.er.usgs.gov/meteor/ (use the What's New pulldown menu). >> >> jeff >> >> >> Dr. Jeffrey N. Grossman phone: (703) 648-6184 >> US Geological Survey fax: (703) 648-6383 >> 954 National Center >> Reston, VA 20192, USA >> > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > Received on Thu 16 Apr 2009 09:26:19 PM PDT |
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