[meteorite-list] 'Black Beauty' - the Movie

Galactic Stone & Ironworks meteoritemike at gmail.com
Wed Feb 12 18:52:28 EST 2014


Every now and then, something really special comes out of the NWA
dense collection area that emphasizes how important this area has been
for the planetary sciences.  Imagine, in a relatively short span of
time, the cosmos gifted us with Tissint and NWA 7034.  That is a
freebie sample delivery from Mars. Gratis Profundis.

Kevin - thanks for those links.  :)

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On 2/12/14, Kevin Kichinka <marsrox at gmail.com> wrote:
> Team Meteorite:
>
> I have avidly followed the work being done on Mars meteorite NWA 7034.
> For me it is a meteorite as exciting as Nakhla or Chassigny or
> Shergotty or ALH84001.
>
> I have been looking for an opportunity to purchase an affordable
> slice, and when I realized that there were pairings, my hopes grew for
> purchasing something that I could afford of a representative size, a
> size that allowed for the viewing of the various lithologies, the
> contrasting clasts.
>
> Matt Morgan was a 'first mover' on internet sales of this meteorite,
> but my budget wouldn't stretch that far. The value was solid. I
> believe he sold out.
>
> When I saw that Peter Marmot and Marc Jost were offering exquisitely
> prepared slices of 'Black Beauty'-pairing NWA 8171, I was pleased to
> make arrangements for one to land in my personal strewn field. It's
> enroute as I type.
>
> This auspicious event caused me to review again during the last week
> all I could learn about what I now consider one of the most important
> meteorites from Mars.
>
> 7034 might give us a treasure-trove of missing data absent until we
> have a sample-return mission of targeted specimens.
>
> 7034 is the first breccia from Mars, a collection of bits and pieces
> of material dating as far back as 4.4 billion years, barely after the
> solar system had a physical address. The youngest clasts date to
> around 2.2 billion years ago. This newly recovered assortment of
> paired rocks is a hard drive of retrievable data 'stored' during the
> time of monsoons on Mars. Is it an 'impact breccia'? Is it a
> 'sedimentary conglomerate'? (!) 'Other'?
>
> And is it another new class of Mars meteorites?
>
> What workers have already learned is worthy of the word 'incredible'.
>
> If you are interested, and if you are on this list how could you NOT
> be interested, please invest the time and learn about it.
>
> For starters, a condensed review of what we already know backed with
> the pertinent research papers is available on David Weirs' excellent
> www.meteoritestudies.com. I've recently communicated with him and he's
> updating the '7034' web pages constantly with new findings. This
> meteorite is aggressively being parsed by researchers, a sign of its
> significance.
>
> And its there that I found a link to Dr. Carl Agee's one-hour Youtube
> discussion of the investigative work already accomplished on NWA
> '7034' (see link below).
>
> Dr. Agee's video is the 'Cliff's Notes' of Meteoritics 101, with some
> post-doc work thrown in to keep it interesting for more advanced
> students. Nearly every type of lab work that can be done on a
> meteorite, especially one suspected of being planetary, is performed
> and explained. Don't miss this!!!!
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0njmkc2XOys
>
> '70-34'... it's a number now reverberating in my mind like '84-0-0-1'.
>
>
> Saludos a todos.
>
> Kevin Kichinka
> MARSROX at gmail.com
> Rio del Oro, Santa Ana, Costa Rica
> "The Art of Collecting Meteorites" - now available as an eBook on
> Amazon and Barnes and Noble.
> "The Global Meteorite Price Report - 2015" available December, 2014
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