[meteorite-list] Terrestrial Age of Bonita Springs H5

mckinney trammell bigpineartifacts at yahoo.com
Tue Nov 16 13:09:24 EST 2010


my guess it is fairly recent due to the amount af rainfall+saltwater in the area. i'm sure i would have been gone if it were to have been around 10,000 or so years.

--- On Mon, 11/15/10, Kevin Kichinka <marsrox at gmail.com> wrote:

> From: Kevin Kichinka <marsrox at gmail.com>
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Terrestrial Age of Bonita Springs H5
> To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> Date: Monday, November 15, 2010, 10:13 PM
> Maybe among the cognoscenti of this
> bulletin board someone might know
> what I can't seem to locate through vigorous research.
> 
> For a future feature in "Meteorite" magazine, it would help
> me to know
> the approximate terrestrial age of Bonita Springs H5
> (Florida).
> 
> While there is an interesting debate raging (maybe it's not
> exactly
> THAT interesting OR raging) about the parent body of H
> chondrites (see
> Dave Weir's website for the "Reader's Digest" version of
> the
> arguments) it's the terrestrial age of this specific met
> that stumps
> me.
> 
> How long has Bonita Springs been cooling its chondrules on
> planet Earth?
> 
> Kevin Kichinka
> www.theartofcollectingmeteorites.com
> www.LaQ-CostaRica.com
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