[meteorite-list] Strange Rock Reportshvvhox lbvcffi

Eddie Garza eddiegarza17 at mac.com
Sat Oct 3 17:10:03 EDT 2009






On Oct 2, 2009, at 7:43 PM, MEM <mstreman53 at yahoo.com> wrote:


> Hello Mike, List, Meteorwrong Collectors,

>

> How many kilos do you want? This is a great meteorwrong specific to

> Pennsylvania highways and railroads. It makes great target material

> for testing your meteorite hunting skills with a metal detector. It

> is not technically a "slag" as it is an intended bulk ore additive

> made in that form for ease of shipping and charging blast furnaces.

>

> I believe it is what is known as "Giest Eisen" or "Eisen Giest"--

> Spirit iron*-- a cobalt/molybdenum -enriched, iron-ore stock made in

> the 80 or 90s for the German steel industry by The New Jersey Zinc

> Company(?) in Palmerton, PA( EPA Super Fund Top 10 and one of my

> favorite collecting places for radioactive morsels). The process

> didn't have as much cobalt as specified(?) or other defect and whist

> waiting for resolution, NJZC went out of the smelting business in

> Palmerton.

>

> Bethlehem Steel may also have experimented with the mountains of

> these which were left in limbo. A lot of it found its way into road

> bed filler. It is magnetic, makes a metal detector sing soprano,

> and as I said is a realistic acting meteorwrong.

>

> Palmerton's "claim" to fame was a perpetual toxic-fog inversion

> overlying the town sited between two high ridges in a narrow

> valley. This killed the vegetation and left Palmertion looking like

> a transplanted town from somewhere in Colorado or Utah. It also

> killed the local residents in particularly persistent fogs.

>

> Elton

>

> * The origin of the name cobalt was attributed to its mysterious

> nature which made smelting iron difficult or so I thought, but the

> Wikipedia article gives a different slant.

>> From the Wikipedia article on cobalt's name origin:

> "The word cobalt is derived from the German "kobalt", from "kobold"

> meaning "goblin", a term used for the ore of cobalt by miners. The

> first attempts at smelting the cobalt ores to produce cobalt metal

> failed, yielding cobalt(II) oxide instead. Also, because the primary

> ores of cobalt always contain arsenic, smelting the ore oxidized

> into the highly toxic and volatile oxide As4O6, which was inhaled by

> workers".

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