[meteorite-list] LOVINA REVISITED
From: Darryl Pitt <darryl_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 9 Dec 2009 09:32:22 -0500 Message-ID: <D8E2EC73-AC04-4487-9CD6-5DE3FB2D3928_at_dof3.com> Thanks for your kind words, Svend, but you're giving me far more credit than I deserve. I did not shepherd Lovina through the certification process. My acquisition simply would not have occurred had Lovina not been previously certified as a meteorite. Please see the relevant article in Lunar and Planetary Science: http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2008/pdf/2412.pdf On Dec 9, 2009, at 7:08 AM, info at niger-meteorite-recon.de wrote: > Thank you for the new evaluation Darryl. > > Although this is a regrettable development one must not forget that > you took > the initial risk of acquiring such exotic material, which alone is a > remarkable achievement. I very much hope that this experience does not > discourage you to venture similar acquisitions in the future. If it > wasn't for > people like you, most meteorites of similar caliber would never see > the light of > public. Set backs are a natural part of this business and there are > very few > dealers who would not subscribe to that. > > Svend > > > > > > Darryl Pitt <darryl at dof3.com> hat am 9. Dezember 2009 um 09:15 > geschrieben: > >> >> Well, I had an interesting day today.... >> >> This morning I met with Roy Clarke, Linda Welzenbach, Cari Corrigan, >> Glen MacPherson, and Tim McCoy at the Smithsonian. During our get- >> together Tim made several observations as to why Lovina could very >> well not be what it has been made out to be---which is to say, a >> meteorite---and why more work must be done. >> >> In Tim's words.... >> >> 1) The sulfides are not simply troilite and appear optically to be >> multiple phases, including one that looks like the Ni-rich sulfide >> pentlandite. >> >> 2) Although the presence of the octahedrons has been attributed to >> weathering, the structure of the remainder of the meteorite shows >> fine >> stringers of sulfide, not large areas that would easily weather out >> leaving such octahedron. >> >> 3) On one polished slice, the sulfides clearly wrap around one of >> the >> indentations, rather than the cross-cutting relationship one might >> expect from a significantly weathered iron meteorite. >> >> 4) The composition given - high Ni coupled with moderately high Ga >> and Ge - is difficult to reconcile with a meteorite composition. >> Iron meteorites acquire high Ni concentrations through 1 of 3 >> mechanisms. Oxidation simply changes iron to FeO, leaving Ni behind. >> This can produce high-Ni irons with modest Ga and Ge. Nebular >> condensation can also produce high-Ni iron which then melts to form >> cores in which high-Ni iron meteorites form. This process, however, >> occurs at high temperature where the volatile elements Ga and Ge are >> depleted. Finally, you can produce high Ni through fractional >> crystallization. Ni prefers the solid phase when a core >> crystallizes, >> so early irons are low in Ni and later crystallizing ones are high in >> Ni. However, Ga and Ge behave opposite of Ni, so low Ni irons are >> high in Ga and Ge and high Ni irons are low and Ga and Ge. The >> published Ga and Ge values are at least a factor of 15 higher than >> reported for similar iron meteorites. >> >> 5) The holes exposed in the center of the specimen are not the shape >> one would expect of weathering, but seem circular. Circular vugs are >> commonly produced in slags when gases try to escape. >> >> There was more...including the fact that Indonesia is a nickel-rich >> locality as well as Tim's conclusion that Lovina was most likely a >> highly weathered example of a smelted Ni-rich sulfide. >> >> Sales have been suspended and monies are in the process of being >> returned. Further testing will be done to confirm Lovina's place of >> origin and the results will be posted to the list by mid-January. >> >> I think I'll go see the new Clooney film "Up In The Air." Ohhh--- >> and >> might anyone want an inexpensive 13 kg specimen of Willamette for >> Christmas?! >> >> >> And how was your day? ;-) >> >> >> ______________________________________________ >> http://www.meteoritecentral.com >> Meteorite-list mailing list >> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >> http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Wed 09 Dec 2009 09:32:22 AM PST |
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