[meteorite-list] Dimmitt Main Mass?
From: Michael Gilmer <meteoritemike_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 3 Oct 2011 09:15:56 -0400 Message-ID: <CAKBPJW95NXrQmsqskVQ7wtUYG+g4XHjbvsY=eWGPYjza=YG_pA_at_mail.gmail.com> Hi Matt and List, Grady's COM lists the following large masses or quantities in collections - TCU - 130kg University of California - 6.644kg University of New Mexico - 2.71kg Max Planck Inst - 11.3kg I'm not sure which of those are single masses and which represent a total of pieces. BTW - I agree about Dimmitt. It's one of the most interesting Texas meteorites (that is commonly seen). Best regards, MikeG -- --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer) Website - http://www.galactic-stone.com Facebook - http://tinyurl.com/42h79my News Feed - http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516 Twitter - http://twitter.com/galacticstone EOM - http://www.encyclopedia-of-meteorites.com/collection.aspx?id=1564 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------- On 10/3/11, mail at mhmeteorites.com <mail at mhmeteorites.com> wrote: > Does anyone know the weight of the single largest Dimmitt found? TCU has a > 3.4kg piece listed in their catalog. And what a nice meteorite this is in > thin section and hand sample. Loads of chondrules and veins; can really tell > it is an H3. > Matt > ------------------------ > Matt Morgan > Mile High Meteorites > http://www.mhmeteorites.com > P.O. Box 151293 > Lakewood, CO 80215 > > Kerf Industries LLC > Precision Wire Saw > http://www.kerfindustries.com > ______________________________________________ > 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 >Received on Mon 03 Oct 2011 09:15:56 AM PDT |
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