[meteorite-list] Meteorite?

Jimski47 at aol.com Jimski47 at aol.com
Wed Nov 30 16:36:12 EST 2011


Hi Doug and List,
 
After doing some research and talking to Randy Korotev I believe that this  
stone is a glacier deposited Basalt. Can't be 100% certain that the grains 
are  iron. There all less than 1mm in size and hard to see. I have found 
basalts in  the past with iron flakes and olivine so I think it's very possible 
that the  grains are iron. I posted some photo's of a couple of the iron 
bearing basalts  that I found over the years on the Meteorite Junction site. 
_http://www.meteoritejunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=2860#p2860_ 
(http://www.meteoritejunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=2860#p2860) 
 
Cheers,
Jim K

In a message dated 11/30/2011 3:19:35 P.M. Central Standard  Time, 
mexicodoug at aim.com writes:
Thanks Randy for your added ideas; as you  say, the rock in the photo 
doesn't appear fractured yet in the second image  it appears it is 
weathered deep inside, unless it formed in two  stages.  Good point on 
the hematite.  I find it in a lot of  concretions that people are always 
calling meteorites.  I believe it  was one of these nearly 10 years ago 
that got me on the list after a miner  and his beautiful daughter both 
insisted to me they had seen them fall, in  the middle of some desert 
devoid of life.  Her name wasn't Clementina  but the mine was both in a 
cavern and through a canyon;-)

This rock  would be a great candiditate to put up on your website of 
wrongs in my  opinion, the interior of the first image is very tricky.

I think you are  agreeing that it would be difficult to find reduced 
metal in an otherwise  hematite rich matrix for terrestrial rocks.  Does 
anyone else have any  thoughts on that (which include natural 
meteorwrongs or  meteorites?)

Kindest wishes
Doug




-----Original  Message-----
From: Randy Korotev <korotev at wustl.edu>
To:  meteorite-list <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Wed, Nov 30,  2011 1:23 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite?


I measure  the specific gravity of most of the rocks that people send
me.  The book  values for the SG of hematite and magnetite are in the
5.1-5.3 range.  I  get a lot of hematite and magnetite rich rocks, and
SG's range from 3 to  5.  The low ones are usually from rocks with
quartz sand cemented by a  lot of hematite or, perhaps better,
hematite diluted with quartz  sand.

I also get a lot of rocks that are claimed to contain metal but all  I
can see are shiny mica flakes and grains of pyrite or arsenopyrite
that  look like metal but aren't.  As I say on this page, a good test
is to  look at the grains after sawing and see if you can see the saw  
marks.

http://meteorites.wustl.edu/id/ordinary_chondrites.htm

If  you can't, it's probably not FeNi metal.  I'd like to see the sawn
face  of the stone in those photos up close.

Ordinary chondrites break apart  from weathering in nature because the
metal rusts, causing a volume expansion  (like rust blisters under
automobile paint) that fractures the rock making it  easier for water
to get in, etc..  That's the only environment I'd  expect to see a lot
of hematite together with metal.  The rock in the  photos doesn't seem
fractured.

Randy Korotev




At  10:00 PM 2011-11-29 Tuesday, you wrote:
>Hi Mike and thanks for your  opinion.  I seem to see some tiny
>vesicles but can't be sure; also  we can't assume it's metal that's
>sparkling and my thoughts are at a  density of 3.2 g/mL it is
>possibly some sort of basalt.  Anyway,  it's a very interesting
>meteorwrong, (assuming it's a wrong from the  streak test which may
>be at odds with it being basalt ...).  Wonder  what Randy would think
>about it; the rock was found in the midwest not  too far from
>him.  It'd be a good one for his great site.   Probably can strike it
>down as a meteorite by thinking about the two tone  concentric heart
>it has with dendrites coming out (second picture).   Still puzzled...
>
>Kindest  wishes
>Doug
>
>
>-----Original  Message-----
>From: Galactic Stone & Ironworks  <meteoritemike at gmail.com>
>To: MexicoDoug  <mexicodoug at aim.com>
>Cc: Jimski47 <Jimski47 at aol.com>;  meteorite-list
><meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Sent:  Tue, Nov 29, 2011 8:34 pm
>Subject: Re: [meteorite-list]  Meteorite?
>
>
>Hi Doug and List,
>
>Except for  the grain size, it reminds me of some acapulcoites,
>visually  speaking.  And if not for the metal flakes, it reminds me of
>a very  finely grained angrite.
>
>Best  regards,
>
>MikeG
>
>
>--
>Galactic Stone  & Ironworks - Meteorites & Amber (Michael Gilmer)
>
>Website  - http://www.galactic-stone.com
>Facebook -   http://tinyurl.com/42h79my
>News Feed -  http://www.galactic-stone.com/rss/126516
>Twitter -  http://twitter.com/galacticstone
>
>
>
>On 11/29/11,  MexicoDoug <mexicodoug at aim.com> wrote:
>>Looks like this has been  commented on a bit and confirmed as a -
>>meteorwrong - and apparently  streaked reddish since it is commented
>>that a streak test indicated  it was probably hematite.  (The color
>>isn't mentioned, only that  the streak proved it was hematite  was
>>mentioned.)
>>
>>just one comment, it would be  nice to have these threads in the forum
>>since having to sign up on  another site if the thread is started there
>>twists up the thread  ...
>>
>>here are the interior  pictures:
>>
>>http://www.meteoritejunction.com/download/file.php?id=1121
>>
>>http://www.meteoritejunction.com/download/file.php?id=1122
>>
>>Also,  this stone is stranger in my opinion than that.
>>
>>The OP  mentions it has a density of around 3.1 g/cc and says that
>>hematite  has a density of about 2.7 g/cc, and accounts for the higher
>>density  being caused by metal flakes distributed throughout  the
>matrix.
>>   Hematite is muich heavier than 2.7  g/cc, after all in broad terms,
>40%
>>of its chemical formula is  iron so one, ignoring the packing, could
>>guestimate the minimum  density of hematite at 0.4*(8 g/cc) = 3.2 g/cc,
>>but given that the  oxide has some weight, hematite ought to have a
>>density of between  4-6 g/cc (and they are around 5.2 g/cc for both
>>magnetite and  hematite, depending on how it 'settles' together).
>>Probably the 2.7  g/cc referred to was for quartz terrestrial rocks,
>not
>>oxides  of iron.
>>
>>In any case, I wonder if anyone else has  experience with metal flakes
>>in hematite.  Hematite one of the  most highly oxidized forms of iron
>>right up there, more than  goethite, and what can result when magnetite
>>oxidizes further.   I makes me wonder how you could have metal flakes
>>survive in a  hematite matrix (I don't think this can happen but really
>>would like  to know if anyone has seen this, for all I know there is a
>>common  process that can produce this, though I can't imagine what it
>>would  be unless someone mixed up a batch specially to do  it).
>>
>>ref:
>>http://www.meteoritejunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=2860#p2860
>>
>>Kindest  wishes
>>Doug
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>-----Original  Message-----
>>From: Jimski47 <Jimski47 at aol.com>
>>To:  meteorite-list <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>>Sent: Mon,  Nov 28, 2011 3:54 pm
>>Subject: [meteorite-list]  Meteorite?
>>
>>
>>Hope everyone had a nice holiday  weekend. I did some meteorite hunting
>>and
>>found this  stone. I'd like to get some feedback on  it.
>>_http://www.meteoritejunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=2860#p2860_
>>(http://www.meteoritejunction.com/viewtopic.php?f=10&p=2860#p2860)
>>
>>
>>Cheers,
>>Jim  K
>>
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