[meteorite-list] Rock Hunters Still Canvassing Northern CaliforniaFor Meteorites

dorifry dorifry at embarqmail.com
Thu Nov 1 12:16:47 EDT 2012


I like the part about asteroids orbiting Jupiter before the Earth formed!

Phil Whitmer

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Robert Verish" <bolidechaser at yahoo.com>
To: "Meteorite-list Meteoritecentral" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Cc: "Marc Fries" <fries at psi.edu>
Sent: Thursday, November 01, 2012 12:56 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] Rock Hunters Still Canvassing Northern 
CaliforniaFor Meteorites


> http://sacramento.cbslocal.com/2012/10/30/rock-hunters-still-canvassing-northern-california-for-meteorites/
>
> With the threat of rain in the Novato area, desperate measures needed to 
> be taken, so we went back to soliciting the locals to look for space-rocks 
> in their driveways and yards -
> via the local TV news stations:
>
> Rock Hunters Still Canvassing Northern California For Meteorites
> October 30, 2012 6:47 PM
> View Comments
>
> Reporting Neda Iranpour
> Filed under
> Local, News, Seen On, Syndicated Local
>
> NOVATO (CBS13) – A light show hard to forget brought out rock hunters who 
> are still canvassing Northern California days after the asteroid came 
> crashing down.
>
> There are all kinds of rocks in parking lots and gravel in fields so how 
> do they know what a meteorite is? Well, they say to look for something 
> that stands out.
>
> It may look like a tar ball to us earthlings, but according to meteorite 
> hunter Bob Verish, it’s a cosmic gem.
>
> “It shows a history of having had some catastrophic collision in the 
> asteroid belt,” he said.
>
> It’s a rock so foreign, so ancient, he says it was floating around Jupiter 
> before the Earth ever formed.
> Rock Hunters Still Canvassing Northern California For Meteorites
>
> Bob Verish found this space ball worth about $10,000 while searching the 
> Novato area in Marin County. (credit: CBS13)
>
> Two weeks ago, a big, bright flash danced across the sky, sending a glow 
> show across half the state.
>
> “We don’t get many falls like this in California,” he said.
>
> As impressive as it was when it crashed, that’s also why it’s so difficult 
> to find its 4.5-billion-year-old parts.
>
> “It came in at a lower angle. It spread out the stone,” he said.
>
> Only four pieces have been found in Novato and they’re worth $100 per 
> gram. Bob’s weighs in at about 100, making it a $10,000 rock.
>
> It’s a true treasure for a man who once sent NASA probes to outer space. 
> Now he’s probing this planet for galactic goods.
>
> If it jumps to his magnet, he says it’s likely out of this world. Bob’s 
> now convinced there are larger pieces to this puzzle in Novato.
>
> “We try not to think about the fact that it’s worse than a needle in a 
> haystack,” he said.
>
> After searching several square miles, he’s convinced larger rocks are 
> lurking.
>
> The search seems difficult and endless. They also have to speed it up 
> because every time it rains, they lose some evidence and so people like 
> bob are racing against the clock. There’s another storm on the way.
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