[meteorite-list] New or maybe old QUESTION??????

Michael Farmer meteoriteguy at yahoo.com
Sun May 4 11:23:35 EDT 2008


I just remmember reading about it and seeing the
photos of individual meteorites that had been cut in
the matrix, still full of chondrules.
Anyone know where I can get my hands on a slab?
Michael Farmer


--- Göran Axelsson <axelsson at acc.umu.se> wrote:

> Hey!
> 
> I never thought that I had to correct you in the
> field of meteoritics.
> 
>  :-)
> 
> Sweden does have a couple of old coal mines but the
> fossile meteorites 
> is found in lime stone quarries.
> 
> I have also been shown in the roof of a mine (south
> of Kumla) of a 
> structure that was claimed to be an impact crater
> (or impact pit) but I 
> haven't been able to find anything published about
> it.
> That was before I got hooked on meteorites so I
> didn't know what to look 
> for or ask. The age of that quartzite strata should
> have been in the 
> range of 400-600 million years.
> 
> /Göran
> 
> Michael Farmer wrote:
> > Yes, Sweden is well known for it's "fossil
> meteorites"
> > dug up in coal mines.
> > You can google them but they are clearly hundreds
> of
> > millions of years old, and you can still see clear
> > chondules in pieces.
> > Michael Farmer
> > --- Pete Shugar <pshugar at clearwire.net> wrote:
> >
> >   
> >> List,
> >> Maybe this has been asked and answered (sounds
> like
> >> a lawer thing) and maybe 
> >> not.
> >> Since I am relatively new to collecting and
> >> certainly not an Expert in any 
> >> area of meteorite study (with the exception of
> >> magnetisum (from the sky 
> >> magnetic VS made a magnet by processes here on
> >> earth).
> >> Here's my question:
> >> A geologist  digs in an area that he thinks there
> >> will be the likelyhood of 
> >> finding a fossil. Maybe he gets lucky and maybe
> >> finds bunches of them.
> >> Has anyone ever found a meteorite buried deep in
> a
> >> layer that is thousands 
> >> or even millions of years old?
> >> Years ago--long before I became an obsessed,
> crazed,
> >> meteorite addict,
> >> while teaching a series on earthquakes, I had
> found
> >> a video of a scientist 
> >> standing with one foot on the Pacific plate and
> the
> >> other foot on the North 
> >> Americian plate, ie astraddle of the San Andreas
> >> fault line. In back of him 
> >> was a small vertical clift of maybe 10 feet and
> you
> >> could plainly see the 
> >> shift (approx 15 inches) in the layers of
> sediment.
> >> Now I've got to thinking (some say this is my
> >> problem--Thinking) that these 
> >> meteorites have a tremendous terestial age. If
> the
> >> earth is bombarded by 
> >> these meteorites throughout the aeons, then there
> >> should be a record, ie 
> >> evidence in the form of buried craters (see the
> >> Odessa,Tx crater) -- Approx 
> >> 100 to 110 feet deep that  has been filled in
> till
> >> it is only 25 to 30 feet 
> >> deep now due to wind blown sand (mostly). I've
> got a
> >> pamplet of  "Occasional 
> >> Papers of the Strecker Museum" from Baylor
> >> University showing  a neat cross 
> >> section of the Odessa Crater.
> >> How much investigation into the cross section
> >> structure of the sediment 
> >> layers, looking for evidence of craters has been
> >> done?  Has there ever been 
> >> an accidential discovery of a buried crater in a
> >> clift side. Lots of these 
> >> erroded mesa exist out west. Maybe evidence is
> >> visable there.
> >> Surely Valeria is not the only animal killer out
> >> there.
> >> Maybe another animal drilled by a passing
> meteorite
> >> with the coresponding 
> >> meteorite near the body. Maybe there's no body
> but
> >> the meteorite is still 
> >> there buried in the deeper layers of sediment.
> Maybe
> >> tektites are the only 
> >> surviving evidence.
> >> In a nutshell, has there ever been a meteorite
> found
> >> at a depth of sediment 
> >> that is plainly very old?
> >> Pete 
> >>
> >> ______________________________________________
> >> http://www.meteoritecentral.com
> >> Meteorite-list mailing list
> >> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> >>
> >>     
> >
>
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
> >   
> >
> > ______________________________________________
> > http://www.meteoritecentral.com
> > Meteorite-list mailing list
> > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> >
>
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list
> >
> >   
> 
> ______________________________________________
> 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