[meteorite-list] intriguing Question

Zelimir.Gabelica at uha.fr Zelimir.Gabelica at uha.fr
Thu Jan 10 05:37:46 EST 2008


Hi Peter, List,

This question also puzzled me some time until I learned that deserts  
in Mongolia are rarely sand deserts but rather grass filled steppes or  
a kind of bush where it is not easy to spot dark meteorites.
I learned that from a meteorite hunter who had an (unsuccessful) try  
some years ago.
This is of course probably not valid all throughout that country.

I also guess not all areas were explored (roads are quasi inexistant  
in most parts).

And, yes, it seems permission from Chinese is needed, possibly also an  
"expertized" official guide....?

This possibly does not explain all but the grass-like steppe is  
certainly a reason.

Happy New Year again to all (from Portugal, where I spend some time in  
Lisbon university and where I may devote some rare free hours  
in...looking for meteorites...(dealers ? collectors ? exhibits ?))

Happy hunting,

Zelimir


Quoting Peter A Shugar <pshugar at clearwire.net>:

> Hello,
> I'm the newbie, so please explain this to me. This is an intriguing question.
> I can't figure it out. I know the Sahara desert is about a galgillion
> square miles.
> Then there are the deserts in Calif., South America, the Antarctic continent
> and God only knows where else. Why don't I see any meteorites from the
> Gobi desert, or maybe the Mongolia desert.
> And then there is little dinky Roosevelt Co, NM at just 2,455 sq miles
> and it has a staggering
> 109 meteorites, which comes to one for every 22.5 sq miles. What gives?
> They are of a wide variety of classifications, so it can't be turning
> every piece in
> for classification. I can't speak for anyone else, but I find this very
> puzzling.
> Any thoughts, List?
> Pete ______________________________________________
> http://www.meteoritecentral.com
> Meteorite-list mailing list
> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list






More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list