[meteorite-list] earth rocks that contain nickel
From: Mike Hankey <mike.hankey_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 16 Nov 2009 17:11:54 -0500 Message-ID: <f0a794130911161411v683d0cax82016b45b47c8e54_at_mail.gmail.com> Dear List, With all the recent attention put on newbies I thought now would be the perfect time to ask something stupid. My Question: What Earth rocks naturally contain nickel? The reason I ask is I have found some rocks that test positive for nickel. I have used the Nickel allergy test, the cotton swab turned pink and stayed pink for more than 5 minutes. When researching this nearly every source I have found says nickel inside of earth rocks is very rare and a good sign for positive meteorite identification. The rock in question: - has a black crust (not as nice as I would expect), - it has a bulk density of 3.6, - it has shiny, small metal flakes on inside - it is magnetic, - it does not leave a streak - it tests positive for nickel - it is not slag (no vesicles, stony gray interior) I do not think this is a meteorite because the interior looks like ingenious rock and I have not been able to find meteorite pictures that look similar. So what I'm really trying to do is get a list of earth rocks together that do contain nickel so that I can ID it off of one of them (and ignore it in the future if I come across it again). I have read this page: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel and the samples on that page, limonite, garnierite, pentlandite don't seem to match up with what I have here. Here is a picture of the rock in question: http://www.mikesastrophotos.com/rocks/nickel-rock.jpg Thanks, Mike >From University of Washington 'Gallery of meteor wrongs...' With a few rare and well known exceptions, naturally occurring terrestrial rock do not contain iron metal or iron-nickel metal. There are two reasons. First, early in Earth's history the iron-nickel metal sank to form the Earth's core. Second, any metal that did not sink has oxidized (rusted) over Earth's long history. The Earth's environment is far more oxidizing (oxygen atmosphere and water) than space, where meteorites originate. Earth rocks do contain iron and nickel, but only in oxidized (non-metallic) form. Therefore, if you find a rock that contains iron-nickel metal, it's probably a meteorite. That sounds simple, but there are two problems. First, many people find slags and other by-products of metal manufacturing. Some of the samples that have been brought to us may have been from forges or blacksmith shops that are more than 100 years old (see meteorwrongs 026, 027, 061, 065, 070, 075, 093, and 122). Others appear to fall from the sky for unknown reasons (see Getafe). Metal in slags and industrial by-products is mostly iron. Such materials will probably contain little nickel (much less than 1%). So, if you can determine that the sample has little or no nickel, then the sample is not a meteorite. The second problem is that some minerals in terrestrial rocks look like metal but are not. All that glitters is not metal. Many rocks contain small grains of sulfide minerals like pyrite ("fool's gold") or micas that are finely disseminated and shiny. I've had many people tell me, "But, it contains metal!" when there really isn't any. Clue: If there are shiny bits in it but it's not magnetic, it's not a meteorite (Meteorite Realities). Received on Mon 16 Nov 2009 05:11:54 PM PST |
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