[meteorite-list] Cat Mountain on EBay

Greg Stanley stanleygregr at hotmail.com
Sun Aug 21 00:07:39 EDT 2011


I would think each would be called Cat Mountain, if they are all classified the same as the first one and were found in the same area, suggesting a strewn field.  There are no Franconia 002 or Gold Basin 002.  I guess the 'name' of a meteorite is one of a single stone or the strewn field.

My few grams worth.

Congratulations to all the finders of the new stones and to Count on getting the classification done.  I also look forward to Rubin's article.

Greg S


Sent from my iPhone

On Aug 20, 2011, at 2:25 PM, Michael Mulgrew <mikestang at gmail.com> wrote:

> Doug,
> 
> I asked Bob Verish about this a few months ago.  The MetBul does not
> show number designations, it recognizes two stones that make up the
> TKW for the Los Angeles meteorite.  The 001 and 002 designations were
> internal to Mr. Verish for his own record keeping, but I believe he
> said (and I hope he'll chime in and correct me if I am mistaken) he
> used them publically a few times and without realizing it the number
> designation spread.
> 
> -Michael in so. Cal.
> 
> On Sat, Aug 20, 2011 at 12:13 PM, MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com> wrote:
>> 
>> ...
> 
> 
>> 
>> Finally, can someone say why those incredible US Martians: LA001 and LA002 got numbers if they are considered paired?  Bob?  There's no LA003 through LA00n that I'm aware of ... Can a slice of one be distingueshed from another?  Are there other examples of unique / closed numbering?  What ever happened to the protocol of (a), (b), (c), ...
>> 
>> Kindest wishes
>> Doug
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