[meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite
From: Regine P. <fips_bruno_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2012 18:17:34 +0100 (BST) Message-ID: <1335806254.22472.YahooMailNeo_at_web132105.mail.ird.yahoo.com> Other images are here: http://spiralmemo.blogspot.de/p/blog-page.html and here: http://spiralmemo.blogspot.de/p/night-at-museum.html Interesting, the handling by many somehow never occurred to me. I always imagined just one person treating the meteorite as one of his own kids. Perhaps because it was wrapped in a feather blanket and had its own grave. ----- Urspr?ngliche Message ----- > Von: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com> > An: fips_bruno at yahoo.de; Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > CC: > Gesendet: 16:22 Montag, 30.April 2012 > Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite > > Interesting though these are likely three different types of human > weathering (wearing). > > w1: Here's a nice picture of the Canyon Diablo (Camp Verde iron) piece > in which listmembers can appreciate these comments regarding possible > handling (rubbing, perhaps along these line suggested something similar > to a tradition of receiving sacrament (Eucharist (sp?)) some Mexican > Catholic churches when a transmuted plaster-Jesus is kissed by nearly > everyone attending lined up single file - causing wear). > > http://books.google.com/books?id=xCGpmoJl2dgC&pg=PA118 > > w2: The perceptions of "wear " on an ancient, recovered find are of a > different nature than one with fresh fusion crust and flowlines plus, > over the stony olivine crystals of the Glorieta Mountain (Pojoaque > iron) piece what was claimed to be a thick, possible fresh fusion > crust.? But as you say they could show different sorts of handling, in > a case of a 61 kilos Camp Verde, not likely to have been carried about! > > > w3: As for Anoka (Havana beads), as well as the Egyptian stuff, that's > a different type of forming and "wearing" than Pojoaque and Camp Verde > > - the work in the literature and a poster on the Smithsonian website a > few years ago pairing some of those to the Anoka meteorite suggests > that the Smithsonian/UCLA/Iowa has access to two of the mentioned beads. > > "We conducted optical microscopy, SEM ele-mental and phase mapping, > electron microprobe analy-ses, LA-ICP-MS and INAA analyses of Havana > and Anoka for comparison." > > ref: > http://www.lpi.usra.edu/meetings/lpsc2008/pdf/1984.pdf > > > kindest wishes > Doug > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Regine P. <fips_bruno at yahoo.de> > To: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com>; Meteorite-list > <Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> > Sent: Mon, Apr 30, 2012 2:00 am > Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite > > > Camp Verde comes to mind, of which one side, "the backbone" as > Laurence > Garvie > calls it, seems to have been rubbed smooth. But taken its weight it > could hardly > have been carried around by a medicine man. Since I have first seen it > I have > always imagined someone taking it for its deceased child which has > fallen back > from the sky. It has a head, shoulders and a spine. Just a trifle heavy > perhaps. > > > > ----- Urspr?ngliche Message ----- >> Von: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com> >> An: fips_bruno at yahoo.de; Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >> CC: >> Gesendet: 1:57 Montag, 30.April 2012 >> Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite >> >> & quot; the meteorite had been carried in a medicine bag? It doesn't > > sound >> implausible, but what are the clues?" >> >> Hi, Regine, Carleton, Mike, Bernd, Jeff, David, Listers; >> >> I would like to draw some attention to the "carried in a medicine >> pouch" since Regine asked ;-) >> >> These guys are all with the Great Spirit now, who did the > excavations, so >> we're stuck analyzing something that was contermplated in the > 1920's >> with the baggage of nearly an intervening century. >> >> It is quite possible, like many things, that this medicine pouch > comment is a >> comment run amok as usual with meteorites, someone says something, > then it > takes >> on a life of its own due to tales getting taller,even among > conservative >> scientists, unintentionally, of course, everyone just takes away a > different >> idea and they follow natural 'election'. >> >> The original comment seems to be that it was carried as > "medicine", >> rather than in a medicine pouch.? While this seems to be a minor > difference, >> it's not.? One involves an inference and the other is more of an >> observation. >> >> Nininger later (1952) expounds on the comment when discussing Native > American >> meteorite collectors and the medicine pounch has by then become alive > in its >> own, through no one's fault. >> >> The concept of "medicine" doesn't necessarily require a > pouch, and >> may not even be in the hands of a medicine man, why, it just as well > could > have >> been a chief, or a brave warrior ... and could just as well be from a > great > deal >> of handling.? The observation was simply that at least three of the >> protuberances above the regmaglypts depressions were highly worn from > what was > >> very plausibly a soft material.? To make the leap to call it a pouch, > or just > a >> lot of hands ... is a good philosophical theme for a room full of > meteorite >> collectors and archeaologists without Regine's magic powder burns > evidence.? >> But the fact was, the wear was supposedly caused from a lot of > handling or >> rubbing.? That said, ablation is a strange master and it would be > verrrrry >> interesting to revisit this "wear" which formed the basis of the >> original archaeological comments. >> >> What is for sure, apparently is that it was found inside the pottery > and that > in >> turn in a burial ground.? So there are some Spirits floating around > it.? > Perhaps >> Man & Impact Ed has a theory, it's his ballywick.? But we do need > to > see >> it.? Carleton kindly mentions that a couple of grams were at ASU, > that makes >> sense that Nininger would take some.? My fear is that calling this > pivotal > iron >> "just" another synonym does no good to science if it is lost for >> inspection.? Apparently the piece weighed originally 3 ounces (about > 85 g), > and >> it was a complete individual subject to what was speculated to be a > violent >> history, that is, after Nininger figured out how Glorieta ripped > apart along > of >> course with Kunz. >> >> But not only is the mystery with the original piece, this piece is > historical > in >> that it was the first specimen that was used as a keystone to pair a > pallasite > >> fall to a siderite fall ... and help create the need to have a single > name > with >> synonyms ... how ironic, errr... palladoxical ;-) >> >> Kindest wishes >> Doug >> >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Regine P. <fips_bruno at yahoo.de> >> To: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com>; bernd.pauli >> <bernd.pauli at paulinet.de>; meteorite-list >> <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> >> Sent: Sun, Apr 29, 2012 7:04 pm >> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite >> >> >> Hi Doug, Bernd and all, >> >> I too would like to know where this one is being kept. What baffles > me though, >> how does one get to the conclusion the meteorite had been carried in > a > medicine >> bag? It doesn't sound implausible, but what are the clues? Magic > powder >> topping? >> Is there any further info? >> >> >> Regine >> >> >> >> ----- Urspr?ngliche Message ----- >>> ? Von: MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com> >>> ? An: bernd.pauli at paulinet.de; meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >>> ? CC: >>> ? Gesendet: 23:54 Sonntag, 29.April 2012 >>> ? Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite >>> >>> ? Hi Listers, >>> >>> ? Paired - quite likely - It has a much more interesting history than >> to be >> lumped >>> ? as a synonym and IMO value as a named iron in its own right: >>> >>> ? This particular iron showed a lot of evidence of wear from human >> handling and >>> ? Nininger supported Mera's suggestion that it was carried in a >> medicine pouch >>> ? in Pojoaque, which makes a triangle geographically, roughly, with >> Santa Fe, >>> ? Glorieta, Mountain locality and Pojoaque pueble.? According to the >> circumstances >>> ? of the fine, it was found inside some old pottery during > excavations >> at the >>> ? Pueblo, i.e., protected, and exhibited beautiful flow lines and >> notable bluish >> >>> ? fresh fusion crust, indicating it was a reasonable possibility that >> whoever >>> ? found it saw it fall.? As it was found during excavations, it > raises >> the >>> ? possibility of using this to date the Glorieta Mountain fall. >>> >>> ? It would be nice to know where this meteorite is now.? Did it make > it >> to New >>> ? Mexico's collection?? Nininger, in 1931, saw it in Santa Fe, >> specifically in >>> ? the "Department of Anthropology", where Mera may have been >> working.? >>> ? But someone else needs to sleuth a bit further from here because I >> sure >>> ? don't know where it is now, and it would be great to see it in its >> present >>> ? condition ;-), as it was cut up a bit because Nininger and others >> used it to >>> ? argue that Glorieta Mountain wasn't a siderite, but a >> sidero-pallasite >>> ? combination as well as consolidate some of the names Bernd lists > ... >> I think >> the >>> ? paper was 1940. >>> >>> ? Definitely a specimen with a very special, if not sacred, history > ... >>> >>> ? Kindest wishes >>> ? Doug >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> ? -----Original Message----- >>> ? From: Bernd V. Pauli <bernd.pauli at paulinet.de> >>> ? To: meteorite-list <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> >>> ? Sent: Sun, Apr 29, 2012 5:03 pm >>> ? Subject: [meteorite-list] Pojoaque Pallisite >>> >>> >>> ? Hello Jeff, Mike, David and List, >>> >>> ? David wrote: "It is indeed the synonym for Glorieta" >>> >>> ? ... and only one out of several others: >>> >>> ? Albuquerque >>> ? Canoncito >>> ? Glorieta >>> ? Pojoaque >>> ? Rio Arriba >>> ? Santa Fe >>> ? Santa Fe County >>> ? Trinity County >>> >>> ? Cheers, >>> >>> ? Bernd >>> >>> >>> ? ______________________________________________ >>> >>> ? 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 >>> >> > Received on Mon 30 Apr 2012 01:17:34 PM PDT |
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