[meteorite-list] Finding fossil Meteorites

MEM mstreman53 at yahoo.com
Mon Oct 25 18:03:26 EDT 2010


Yes I for one

I have four "candidates" from the Eastern Pennsylvania Anthracite Field.  They 
all were found in overburden/coal piles and not totally in situ per se.  They 
pass muster under field identification but haven't been studied.

One is water mellonshapped approx 18 x 10 inch.( looks a lot like Peekskill was 
shapped) It had what appeared to be a perfect chondrule fall out as I was 
wrapping it up.  It has a high percentage of pyrite which is not unknown in the 
coal beds but rarely in such a huge nodule.  Iron sulfide is consistent with a 
reduction of both metallic and non-metallic iron. The apparent chondrule was 
unique to what I have ever found in coal measures.

Another one is crescent shaped of a classic iron fragmentation shape --which is 
unlike typical water-worn rocks found in coal measures.  It is also coated with 
Iron Carbonate -siderite which is another by-product mineral I would expect from 
an iron meteorite buried 8 miles in a reducing environment.  This came from a 
coal pile which was mined over 100 years ago.  Both are heavier than normal.  I 
haven't had them cut.  Right now I can not rule these out as fossil meteorites.

Yet another was semi-in situ: a block of shale in which a foreign stone.  The 
stone had distorted several inches of shale, bending and compressing the strata 
ahead of it; showing non-stratified infilling behind its apparent path.  This 
suggest insertion by force and Carboniferous cock roaches, 3 ft long dragon 
flies and 30 ft long salamanders are not believed to have been able-- nor 
motivated to chuck rocks into oozey muddy bottoms.

 I found a boulder of sandstone with fossil water ripple marks and just below 
the surface of the ripples were several cavities consistent with meteorite 
shapes about the size of walnuts.  They were hollow but each was coated with a 
thin limonite/hematite layer.  I was only able to get photos.  The boulder was 
buried while I was seeking permission to recover it.  If these were say, fish 
coprolites, washed onto a beach, one would expect them to be on the surface and 
not embedded various depths below the surface.  This could be a biological but 
also can't be ruled out as a meteorite event.

None have been submitted for formal study. I haven't been in a hurry--after all 
they've been waiting 300my what is a few more years?   They were going to Penn 
State but they unplugged/ defunded their fossil meteorite exploration program 
rather abruptly.  Are there any researchers on the list now working on fossil 
meteorites?

 Regards,

Elton

----- Original Message ----
> From: Count Deiro <countdeiro at earthlink.net>

> By the way...have you, or any others on  List, found a fossil meteorite in 
>situ?
> 
> Best regards,

> Count  Deiro
> IMCA 3536  



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