[meteorite-list] Heating moldavites and tektite look-alikes

Norm Lehrman nlehrman at nvbell.net
Thu Jul 21 16:58:32 EDT 2005


All,
Most of you will remember, but there may be some new
members on the list that did not participate in the
last round of "How do you recognize a real tektite?"
list discussions.  A sysnopsis of the results is
posted on my website, including pics of a heated
Arizonaite provided by Jim Tobin (this one did
foam--).

http://tektitesource.com/Tektite_tests.html

Regards,
Norm
http://TektiteSource.com


--- JKGwilliam <h3chondrite at cox.net> wrote:

> Many of use did a lot of speculating about these
> "Arizonaites" or 
> "Grahamites" that were found in Eastern Arizona. 
> Both Jim Kriegh and John 
> Blennert told me the same story that Bernd just
> related here.  I believe 
> they even tried heating the test specimens with a
> torch to see what 
> specimens would froth and which ones wouldn't.
> I figured that they were Apache Tears since we were
> within 50 miles of an 
> area that is known worldwide for it's Apache Tear
> deposits.
> 
> JKGwilliam
> 
> At 12:57 PM 7/21/2005, bernd.pauli at paulinet.de
> wrote:
> >AL wrote:
> >
> >"Someone mentioned one time of putting tektites in
> a microwave oven for
> >a  bit (on high) to try to determine if it is an
> Earth based specimen or
> >a possible tektite ... "
> >
> >
> >Hello AL, Doug, Norm, and List,
> >
> >Back in the year 2000, Jim Kriegh experimented with
> Apache tears and those
> >tektite look-alikes from Arizona that I chose to
> simply call Arizonaites
> >(there are 18 of these in my collection which I got
> from Jim and Twink).
> >Here is what Jim wrote:
> >
> >" ... Thought there is something you should know
> about the Arizona 
> >'whatevers'.
> >I had a chemist friend (he also has studied
> geology) heat one of them in 
> >an oven
> >along with an Apache tear. The Apache tear foamed
> as the water started 
> >coming out
> >of it. The Arizonaite showed no signs of water. He
> even raised the temperature
> >another 500 degrees F above what the Apache tear
> started foaming and all the
> >Arizonaite did was glow red. After cooling it
> looked the same as before. I 
> >am going
> >to test some more to see if any moisture shows up.
> Dr. Kring decided to 
> >look at some
> >after I told him about no moisture in them but he
> said he still thinks 
> >they must be
> >volcanic in source."
> >
> >This should also be applicable to "real", "genuine"
> tektites and
> >moldavites, and those man-made glasses we are
> talking about.
> >
> >but, please, be careful in case anyone should try
> (safety goggles, etc.!)
> >
> >
> >Best wishes,
> >
> >Bernd
> >
> >
> >______________________________________________
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> >Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
>
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> 
> 
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