[meteorite-list] Irons DON'T form Fusion Crust's - yes they DO

Dave Freeman mjwy dfreeman at fascination.com
Sun Jan 7 15:56:00 EST 2007


>
>
>phenomenological
>
It this really a word?  Sounds like a George Bush word.
DF


Matthias Bärmann wrote:

>I agree. But using an expression (also a scientific one) in a
>phenomenological manner we should take care to avoid a contradiction (or
>even tensions) between the phenomenological and the scientific dimension.
>
>----- Original Message ----- 
>From: "Darren Garrison" <cynapse at charter.net>
>To: "Matthias Bärmann" <majbaermann at web.de>
>Cc: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Sent: Sunday, January 07, 2007 8:26 PM
>Subject: Re: Re: [meteorite-list] Irons DON'T form Fusion Crust's - yes they
>DO
>
>
>On Sun, 7 Jan 2007 20:17:25 +0100, you wrote:
>
>  
>
>>But it doesn't hit the point regarding meteorites. "Glassy" evokes the
>>impression of something shiny, very smooth, mirror-like. But as we all now
>>    
>>
>
>But the "laymen" use of the term isn't the scientific one.  "Glassy" means
>something that cooled quickly enough that it didn't have time to crystalize
>and
>is instead, on the atomic level, an amorphous mess.
>
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>  
>
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