[meteorite-list] South Pole Meteorite????????????

Mike Bandli fuzzfoot at comcast.net
Tue Oct 14 15:46:51 EDT 2008


Here is another view of 76001 @ NIPR:

http://metdb.nipr.ac.jp/Data/ALH761/sALH-761.1-79_small_20082219597.jpg

The back has patches of crust, but doesn't look anything like the more fresh and intact crust on the eBay material in question. 76001 was a 20.1kg stone, so it is possible that it had a broken side. I'm away from my photographic catalogs, but maybe someone else can check their own. I believe either the Catalog of Yamato Meteorites or Photographic Catalog (1981) show the entire mass. I'll check when I get home...

Mike Bandli



-------------- Original message ----------------------
From: Jeff Grossman <jgrossman at usgs.gov>

> Gee, this looks an awful lot like ALHA76001, to name a specific

> Antarctic meteorite! Compare the photo of a larger slice of "ALH 761"

> in Japan with the ebay photo:

>

> http://metdb.nipr.ac.jp/Data/ALH761/sALH-761.1-80_small_200822195950.jpg

>

> For several years, I have wondered what happened to the 3800 g piece of

> this meteorite, which was supposedly once in the Field Museum collection

> in Chicago (according to MetBase). However, that meteorite and its

> siblings from 1976 have not been in the Field collection for a long

> time. Is it possible this is it? Maybe one of you knows the history

> of these meteorites well enough to speculate.

>

> Jeff

>

>

> Jason Utas wrote:

> > Hola Darren, All,

> > The story may be crazy, but that meteorite shows weathering exemplary

> > of Antarctic meteorites. Note the thin cracks - almost certainly

> > lined with evaporites, hence the white lining. Also note the fresh

> > exterior and weathered interior. Bassikounou? Nothing like it. More

> > like Antarctic material, to be frank, which, other than ice-blasting,

> > typically shows little-to-no external weathering and varying degrees

> > of internal oxidation.

> > It is a crazy story, but, to be frank, it's either a fresh stone from

> > a salty terrestrial environment that's been laying around for a very

> > short time in very wet conditions, or it is, in fact, from an ice

> > field (somewhere). I've never seen such weathering features on a

> > meteorite from...anywhere else. Have a look at those pictorial

> > catalogs of Antarctic meteorites if you don't believe me - you'll see

> > what I mean.

> > Regards,

> > Jason

> >

> > On Tue, Oct 14, 2008 at 12:13 AM, Darren Garrison <cynapse at charter.net> wrote:

> >

> >> On Mon, 13 Oct 2008 22:27:56 -0500, you wrote:

> >>

> >>

> >>> Here is a link to a "South Pole Meteorite"

> >>> The story sounds kinda lame to me.

> >>>

> http://cgi.ebay.com/H-Class-Chondrite-Meteor-VERY-BIG-Found-At-South-Pole_W0QQit

> emZ180298547302QQihZ008QQcategoryZ3239QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZ

> >>>

> >> Story is crazy, but meteorite looks nice. Whaddya think, Bassikounou?

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>

> --

> Dr. Jeffrey N. Grossman phone: (703) 648-6184

> US Geological Survey fax: (703) 648-6383

> 954 National Center

> Reston, VA 20192, USA

>

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