[meteorite-list] Bediasites agree with Steve's unproven tektite theory

Steve Dunklee steve.dunklee at yahoo.com
Fri Feb 24 18:04:45 EST 2012


Imagine? outgasing causes a spike to form on the surface of a tektite as it cools 5 miles up. then as it falls the spike breaks off to form a ring at its base. half ring or u groove ect.
cheers Steve

--- On Fri, 2/24/12, brian burrer <brimane at gmail.com> wrote:

> From: brian burrer <brimane at gmail.com>
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Bediasites agree with Steve's unproven tektite theory
> To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> Date: Friday, February 24, 2012, 9:49 PM
> Hi list,
> 
> Bediasites are well known for, among other things, these two
> traits:
> 
> 1.Most Bediasites show ample evidence of abrasive transport
> and minor
> to severe smoothing of the surface.
> 
> 2.Bediasites are found in/on the basal portion of the
> Manning unit of
> the Jackson formation in Texas.  They are almost never
> encountered
> "off formation".  The age of volcanic ash later/higher
> in the Manning
> is about one million years after Bediasite formation so the
> tektites
> were placed there rather soon after the event.
> 
> The age of deposition of the Bediasites in the Manning would
> be about
> thirty five million years ago.  Despite the passing of
> an immense
> amount of time etching has failed to significantly alter the
> surfaces
> of the tektites.  U-grooves, V-grooves and navels all
> exist on stones
> with different amounts of ancient abrasion only slightly
> muting some
> and almost obliterating others.  If they were in an
> environment
> conducive to etching after burial Bediasites should all be
> similar to
> the Besednice hedgehog Moldavites.  The evidence
> suggests that little
> etching has occurred on most Bediasites after transport.
> 
> These things taken together suggest that surface sculpture
> on
> Bediasites was a pre-existing condtion and was not developed
> by later
> etching.
> 
> There is one small problem with this; the tektites did get
> some amount
> of time (less than one million years) to etch prior to their
> addition
> to the basal Manning sediments.  While it is possible
> they were
> heavily etched in their earliest years and then abrasively
> transported, it is certain they did not etch significantly
> once
> buried.
> 
> 
> 
> Happy hunting,
> Brian
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