[meteorite-list] Exploring the Solar System in Antarctica (NWA vs Antarctica)

Adam Hupe raremeteorites at yahoo.com
Thu Oct 10 09:54:41 EDT 2013


Jeff Stated: " Papers on hot and cold desert meteorites are subequal, which is the trend we all see."

I agree with this statement.  They were not subequal just a few years ago meaning the trend is favoring hot desert finds long term.

The number of rare and unusual meteorites coming out of the hot deserts far exceed those being recovered from Antarctica.

Adam




--- Original Message -----

From: Jeff Grossman <jngrossman at gmail.com>
To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Cc: 
Sent: Thursday, October 10, 2013 6:03 AM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Exploring the Solar System in Antarctica (NWA vs Antarctica)

50% is not even close.  I counted the peer-reviewed papers in the 2012 
volume of MAPS.  In the 58 non-review papers that reported analyses of 
physical samples of meteorites, 52% used falls, 12% used non-desert 
finds,  24% used hot desert meteorites, and 28% used Antarctic 
meteorites.  (this sums to >100% because some papers reported data in 
multiple categories).

So, if 2012 in MAPS is representative (I'm done counting, so I can't 
answer that), when it comes to the question of what are the most 
important meteorites for Science these days, it isn't hot OR cold desert 
meteorites... it's observed falls.   Papers on hot and cold desert 
meteorites are subequal, which is the trend we all see.

Jeff


On 10/10/2013 12:27 AM, Adam Hupe wrote:
> I will not debate the legacy of Antarctic meteorites.  They have had a wonderful history and their contribution to  science has been invaluable.  Most researchers are sample oriented and are not biased by find location but there are still a few that cling to legacy.  Antarctica had a a two decade plus head start in the abstract/paper queue so naturally there are more documents.  Ten years ago, maybe one in ten papers were on hot desert finds. Now, I estimate about 50%.  At this rate, as very important samples from NWA and other deserts enter the queue, it will not be long before these finds handily overtake Antarctica by a wide margin in the business of science.
>
> In other words; There is not enough material coming out of Antarctica anymore to reverse the current trend which favors the hot desert meteorites for research material in the future.
>
>
> Adam
>
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