[meteorite-list] Oman trip story

Bill Southern Nugget-Shooter at direcway.com
Mon Mar 14 07:10:54 EST 2005


Thank you Eric for sharing your Oman trip! Great reading and nice finds!

Bill S.

>     Everybody seems to enjoy meteorite hunting tales so here is one from 
> my just completed trip to Oman with Mike Farmer and Jim Strope.   It was a 
> good trip for me.   I found a HUGE piece of Mike's lunar, a whopping  3.1 
> grams.  OK, OK, maybe not huge, and not too pretty with none of the white 
> clasts showing in Mike's either, but I found it and it is all mine ;-)). 
> Not for sale until I'm dead and the kids break up my collection.
>
>     The trip was formed after the confirmation that the stone Mike found 
> in January was a lunar meteorite.  Plans were made to leave on 23 Feb and 
> several long unbearable flights later I met Jim and Mike in Dubai.  Two 
> days of driving later we arrived in the search area with a few hours of 
> daylight left.  We headed out into the desert putting the sun to our backs 
> for the best viewing.   Like the first trip to Oman with Jim and Mike, I 
> was fortunate to find the first meteorite of the trip which also turned 
> out to be the largest of the trip.   In this case 6.55 kg of, 
> unfortunately, several hundred very weathered fragments of OC.
>
>     The next morning it was off to the lunar site.   At 9:50 about half 
> hour after arriving at the site I found my lunar piece within 100 feet of 
> where Mike found his piece in January.   I'd like to say I started jumping 
> up and down screaming I found one, but the reality was quite different. 
> By that time I had picked up and discarded 50-100 other small stones. 
> This one didn't have the white clasts I had seen on Mike's.   It certainly 
> wasn't obvious enough that I left it in place to photograph first.   It 
> was different enough though that I put down my gps to mark the spot and 
> took it over to Mike for his opinion.   Definitely LUNAR!!  BIG smiles, 
> high fives and one very happy meteorite hunter, we took it back to the 
> find site and photographed it, recorded the find data and continued the 
> search.   By 12:00 it was brutally hot in the sun and the last couple 
> hours had produced nothing except sunburns and I found a couple artifacts. 
> One was a 9x7cm very crude hand scraper a
> nd the other a small 2.5cm broken spear point.   Made me wonder which came 
> first the humans or the meteorite.    I found another very nice scraper 
> driving through a different area a few days later.   A google search when 
> I returned home indicated they could be as old as 30k-50k years.  To get 
> out of the sun we climbed into air-conditioned vehicles and headed east 
> away from the highway.
>
>     The rest of the day was the Mike Farmer show.   The only meteorite I 
> found all day was my lunar, Jim didn't find any, and Mike ended the day 
> with 9.   We wound up camping about 30-40 miles off the highway.
>
>     The next day we planed the route to end the day and camp at the lunar 
> site.   Again I found 1 meteorite this day.   One of the freshest 
> meteorites from any of Mike's Oman trips and at 1212.5 grams a nice find. 
> Driving from 7am to 7pm though and finding only one meteorite sure is 
> boring and hard on ones butt.   Three days and 3 meteorites and they were 
> all nice ones.
>
>     When we arrived back at the lunar site Mike found 2 more small lunar 
> pieces, 2.04 and 0.78 grams within about 10 minutes.  Mike has eyes like 
> an eagle.  They were the last two pieces we found.  As we fixed dinner the 
> wind really kicked up and there were thunderstorms off in the distance. 
> Mike slept in a tent, Jim in one of the vehicles, and I just set up a cot 
> and slept under the stars.   They were giving me a hard time about getting 
> rained on, but with an average annual rainfall of 0.0 inches in the 
> central desert of Oman in Feb (and every other month as well) I wasn't 
> worried.   At 4am I woke up and rolled over.  Through my eyelids I saw 
> flashes.  I put my glasses on and watched a great lighting show off in the 
> distance for a while.   Rolled over and headed back to sleep, but at 4:30 
> came a rumble of thunder.   Since I was on a metal-legged cot I decided I 
> might be better off in the vehicle.  Put my pants on grabbed my sleeping 
> bag, pillow, and shoes and headed to th
> e vehicle.   Halfway to the vehicle there was huge bolt of lighting, one 
> thousand-one, one thousand-two, one thousand-three, one thousand-four, one 
> thousand RUMMMMBBBBLE.   Less than a mile away, the vehicle was a great 
> decision.   Then the wind  really started blowing and the rain started 
> coming in buckets.   Mike climbed in the other vehicle a minute or two 
> after I did.   Turning on the headlights we watched Mike's tent blow 
> across the desert.  Mike had to chase it in his vehicle and block it after 
> a 100 meter flight.   His metal case with his passport and other things 
> ripped through the tent door while it was rolling and was dumped half-open 
> in the mud.   We drove the other vehicle over to the case and Jim grabbed 
> it. Mike had been cataloging some of his meteorites and they were in the 
> tent in small canvas bags, including the 2 small lunars.  Losing them was 
> a real concern until Mike found them just inside the tent door. One or two 
> more rolls of the tent and they would ha
> ve been out and lost to the wind.  For the next 90 minutes or so we had 
> 50-60 mile per hour winds and lots of rain.   The spot we were at was 
> pooling up.   At this point we were glad we weren't 30-40 miles from the 
> highway like the previous night.
>
>     The rains continued on and off until about 10am.   Walking around you 
> sank 3-4 inches in spots.   We had hoped the rain would wash up some more 
> lunar pieces, but that didn't happen.   We did find Mike's duffel bag, 
> which blew out of his tent, about 500 meters away.   The fly-leaf over the 
> tent we never found. After squishing around for a couple hours we decided 
> to head back to the hotel and clean up.
>
>    The trip back to the highway was exciting plowing through new ponds and 
> muddy areas.   We left tracks that will last for generations.   We only 
> got stuck once on the way back though, when Mike hit a spot where the mud 
> was about 15 inches deep.   It took a while to dig the soup from in front 
> of the tires, but Mike zipped out with no problems.   This was the only 
> day we didn't find any meteorites.   Turns out this was the biggest rain 
> storm in Oman in 15 years.
>
>     We decided to let the lunar field dry out for a couple days and headed 
> farther north were it was a bit dryer.   On our best day we found 15 
> meteorites.   On 4 March at 16:47 I found our 40th  meteorite, a 41.6 gram 
> achondrite, which looks to be a diogenite.   To be honest I was more 
> thrilled about this than the lunar, because it was a cold find, not 
> plowing someone else's find field.   Several hours of searching the area 
> however failed to turn up another piece.     After the rain we returned to 
> the lunar field a couple more times to search, including using a rake and 
> shovel to stir things up, but didn't find any new pieces.
>
>     All total for the trip I found 18 meteorites including the lunar and 
> diogenite.   My 16 ordinary chondrites weighed in at 12.9 kg.   The 3 
> artifacts were a bonus, the first I have ever found.  Never even found an 
> arrowhead in Arizona before.   For me it was a great trip and I'll be 
> ready to head back as soon as the agony of the long flights and days and 
> days of driving fade away, and the kids get tired of seeing their old man 
> around the house.
>
> You can see photos of my lunar and the achondrite at the following URL
>
> <http://www.star-bits.com/oman.htm>
>
>
> --
> Eric Olson
> ELKK Meteorites
> http://www.star-bits.com
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