[meteorite-list] I have a meteorite

David Freeman dfreeman at fascination.com
Tue Jan 18 22:33:19 EST 2005


Kris, Art, List;
The mountains south of Toole will be loaded with mill balls. With the 
size of the mining that went on in a hundred mile area of the Great Salt 
Lake, and of the mountainous areas near there, the probability of more 
mill balls is really high.
 From the third quarter of the 1800's, mining was more intense in this 
part of the world than possibly anywhere else, except Nevada, Colorado, 
and possibly California..   Many KUED TV (Salt Lake City) specials have 
aired showing the great mining episodes of the area.  Copper was king, 
building stone made Salt Lake City a real city, not just a wood 
structure town.
Even if not mining related mill ball, The industrial complexes of the 
last 100 years would produce ball bearings and the military influence 
there would create a multitude of iron spheres to be propelled, or 
dropped, or exploded, or used for load bearing surfaces.  
Meteorite, slim chance....
Dave F.

thornysahuaro wrote:

>Hi Kris and list; 
>I don't want to rain on anyone's parade, but your "iron meteorite"
>sure looks like a mill ball to me.  I have a coffee can full of them
>that look just like your picture.  I got so excited finding those
>little iron meteorites until I sent a couple of them off to the
>university .  Sorry Charlie!
>Mill balls were commonly used to crush gold and silver bearing ore in
>the late 19th and early 20th century.  Any place there were mines you
>are likely find mill balls.
>Art Brasher
>--- Kris Woolley <bkw1111 at msn.com> wrote:
>
>>I have an iron  meteorite, found near the Great Salt Lake, Toole,
>>
>
>
>		
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