[meteorite-list] 8th Aniversary
From: Michael Blood <mlblood_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sat, 26 Mar 2011 20:03:04 -0700 Message-ID: <C9B3F6F8.180E7%mlblood_at_cox.net> I hope to have it out NEXT WEEK! It will be over 300 pages and will be in a Non-transferable PDF file (I think you can "share" It within your own system, so, yes, Ipad, Kindel, what have You - computer, of course. Some may even want to print it. Cost will be $18.95, but on sale to list members at $14 (free delivery, of course) I have been amazed at some of the "history in my articles As I have edited and re-edited them (for spelling, continuity of Font size, etc). The oldest of them are pure scanned articles from The very old VOYAGE! Magazine. It will have a color cover and back page and have active links to on line photos. It is turning out much, much better than I had hoped - and as Always, far, far more work and time demanded in producing it. I will announce it to the list SOON. Thanks, Michael PS: Rob, "Nakhla Dog" Wesel did the "book" photo for me, being the Very generous Photoshop wizard that he is. On 3/26/11 7:19 PM, "Ed Deckert" <edeckert at triad.rr.com> wrote: > Michael, > > Thank you for sharing this article with us. Would you mind also sharing > some more of the details regarding your new book? Can it be read with a > Kindle or Nook? Approximate release date? Cost? Inquiring minds will > certainly want to know! > > Best, > Ed > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Michael Blood" <mlblood at cox.net> > To: "Meteorite List" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> > Sent: Saturday, March 26, 2011 9:58 PM > Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] 8th Aniversary > > > In Memory of what is the most significant hammer fall in written history > (With more documented specific items struck than any other) > Please see the article below from a few pages of my soon to be released > Book well over 300 pages long, in eBook format: > > METEORITE MARKET TRENDS 1997 through 2010. > > > METEORITE MARKET TRENDS > by Michael Blood > May 2003 > > Park Forrest. > > This L5 Impact Melt Breccia dominated the meteorite market in April 2003. > Falling in the late, late evening of March 26th in a the suburb of Chicago > known as Park Forest, and extending into a few neighboring areas, this fall > generated meteorite madness like no other before it. > > The list was abuzz with postings by Steve Arnold of Chicago ? with something > to sayS. his home town, Chicago, had been pelted with meteorites the night > before. And pelted is a good description, as these specimens bashed the hell > out of several structures and dug themselves deep into lawns and shattered > upon impacting the streets. The word "fall" does not describe the velocity > required for the impact force of these meteorites. > > Within 24 hrs, meteorite dealers had descended in number upon the locale of > the fall. Within 2 days the place was crawling with meteorite dealers, > collectors, hunters. > > Now, make no mistake, this meteorite is a significant fall by virtue of its > typology, alone, being an impact melt L5! When's the last time you ran into > one of those? Does Cat Mountain ring a bell? > > As if that weren't enough, then try the fact that no other meteorite I am > aware of has "hammered" so many man made structures in the last two > centuries, including, but not limited to homes, cars, tow trucks, baseball > stands and park playground equipment ? and those are just some of the > ones verified with affidavits. > > Now, to top it all off, imagine half the Tucson contingent falling upon this > neighborhood and running amok for well over a week, wheeling, dealing and, > in some cases, outbidding one another to get their hands on the stuff. As if > that weren't enough, the police followed up issuing these comments: > > Park Forest Police Chief Robert G. Maeyama said Friday. "We're advising > people not to be in a big hurry to sell them. Take a step back and consider > that these are very special objects, and don't take an offer from people who > are trying to buy anything and everything for very little money." (Chicago > Tribune, 3-29-03) > > But, it doesn't end there folksS. then you get local gangs who start ripping > off younger kids who have found stones, you get people finding specimens, > realizing more is being paid if they hit something, so, they start throwing > their finds into their own carsS.. the shenanigans go on almost > endlessly. And all this is before we find out it is an impact melt breccia! > Can you imagine what would have happened had everyone known of the > rarity of typology in the first days after the fall? > > So, the meteorite market was, understandably DOMINATED in April with > sales of Park Forest. And a truly stunning meteorite it is, too. Initial > rumors of huge quantities of material soon proved to be wrong (some dealers > actually TURNED AWAY finders wanting $1/g the first day if their > fragments had "insufficient" fusion crust!). There was, however, enough > found that it at least did not turn out to be highly scarce. While I have > heard no estimates of total weight, it is at least double digit pounds if > not tens of kilos. The unofficial champion hunter, in terms of numbers of > finds: Steve Arnold of Arkansas. > > April saw material being sold in a huge range of prices, from a very few > frags going the first week for as little as $17/g to someone in the field > paying $60/g! Now, that doesn't even include the hammer stones that > nailed man made objects. Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on > perspective, no cats, dogs, people, horses, cows or hamsters were struck > in the fall ? but other targets were nailed mercilessly ? from the yellow > line in the road to the Garza "Wrecking Ball" that crashed through the > roof and ceiling and tore a young boy's room to shreds. (Rob Elliot got well > over a hundred grams of various fragments of this most choice of all > stones). > > The Hupes teamed with Al Lang to purchase the entire ROOM, ceiling, > window, etc. from the Garza home and will create a traveling exhibit > much like the Peekskill car. > > Besides the extremes in prices, the majority of material, not counting the > hammers, has sold rapidly for between $25 and $45 per gram, depending on > multiple factors such as weathering, fusion crust, cut slices vs frags vs > whole stones, dealer from whom one purchases, etc. > > I have heard NO ONE complain about the material they have purchased, > regardless of the what price they may have paid or the form of their > specimen. Everyone is tickled pink with this fall, which comes in everything > from nearly solid black to a light turquoise aquamarine hue to "spider > webbed." > > Personally, I have found myself purchasing several specimens, as one > or two just doesn't do this stuff justice, it is so very varied. [I have > since acquired 11 different fragments of different specific hammer stones > from this fall ? and one termite documented to have been killed by the > Garza Home hammer] the One of my favorite is a 99% fusion crusted oriented > whole stone under 10 grams that Steve Arnold of Arkansas was kind enough > to sell me, then several slices showing varying aspects of this incredible > material. > > I can certainly see why the market was dominated by this fabulous > fall. This thing was like Holbrook and Peekskill combined, with the > technology of the internet to bring it all into our own homesS. is that > cool, or what?! > > Until next timeS HAPPY HUNTING! Michael > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > 67 > > > ______________________________________________ > Visit the Archives at > http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > > ______________________________________________ > Visit the Archives at > http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list -- "Teachin' a pig to dance is a waste of time and it irritates the pig" Mark Twain -- 1. Whenever you're wrong, admit it, 2. Whenever you're right, shut up. Shaquille O'NealReceived on Sat 26 Mar 2011 11:03:04 PM PDT |
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