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Glassthrower
Vendor - Galactic Stone & Ironworks
   
Reged: 04/07/05
Posts: 14601
Loc: Hurricane Alley
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Martin,
After I die, I want to spend eternity in your meteorite display case and/or specimen cabinet! 
Thanks again for this welcome and regular addition to the forum. 
MikeG
-------------------- Michael Gilmer - Member of the Meteoritical Society & Collector of Falling Stars.
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Buy/Sell/Trade Meteorites, Moon Rocks, Mars Rocks, & 35 different falls and types!
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zagami
super member
   
Reged: 08/22/08
Posts: 165
Loc: The Big Sky
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Pesyanoe, Kurgan region, Russia
Aubrite Ca-poor achondrite
Fell: October 2, 1933
A total of 3393 grams of aubrite meteorite fell in the form of several stones constituting the 13th fall (of 18) for the year 1933. The largest single stone on this fall named Pesyanoe was 905 grams.
Unlike calcium-rich achondrites like the eucrites, Ca-poor stones including Pesyanoe have a light colored fusion crust, and in this case, the crust on Pesyanoe looks dirty grey in color.
The namesake and type specimen for the aubrite meteorites is the Aubres meteorite that fell near Nyons, France, on September 14, 1836. Outside the hot and cold desert finds, there are less than a dozen members of the aubrite class, with a vast majority of those witnessed to fall.
Aubrites have distinctive light-colored fusion crust, with a snowy white interior. They are usually friable stones so they crumble apart easy. Because of their high enstatite compositon, aubrites are also known as enstatite achondrites.
In addition to their large white enstatite crystals, they also contain varying amounts of olivine, nickel-iron metal, and troilite, among other minerals. This arrangement of minerals in both composition and size suggests that aubrites cooled underground in their parent body under oxygen-free (reducing) conditions.
Violent impacts are likely in the aubrite’s past since the crystals are broken up and mixed around within the stone. Further, the oxygen isotopic composition of enstatite chondrites has led to the suggestion that aubrites might have formed by partial melting of an enstatite chondrite body.
A great interest to scientists is that aubrites have the highest cosmic ray exposure ages of any stony meteorites, with some estimates ranging up to 120 million years.
Reflectance spectra various asteroids showed similarities between the aubrite meteorites and the main belt asteroid 44 Nysa which happens to be the largest E-class asteroid as well as the brightest asteroid. The only known E-class near-earth asteroid is a suspect for the parent body of the aubrite meteorites. The asterod, named 3103 Eger, is an Apollo and that was discovered in 1982 by Miklós Lovas who named after the city of Egerin Hungary.
In an article titled PRE-ACCRETION AND/OR REGOLITH HISTORY OF THE PESYANOE OBRITE MATTER and published in Lunar and Planetary Science (2003), the authors posit the following conclusions about Pesyanoe:
Quote:
1. The initial Pesyanoe meteorite constrain material was contained the compounds of the essentially different irradiation and shock-thermal pre-history.
2. There are a high probability that the Pesyanoe individual En-grains fossil track characteristics refer to their history of a radiation, thermal and shock-thermal influence chiefly occurred on pre-accretion and/or regolith stages of a parent body formation of this achondrite.
3. The possible ”pure thermal” metamorphism inside a parent body, would result about the same manner in all En grains. But quite essential difference of TL-parameters, measured for the several matrix samples, indicate on very small influence of this process in comparison with the more effective and heterogeneous shock-thermal process during of exogenic reworking of this meteorite material.
4. Absence of the visual variation of concentration of some volatile-refractory elements in a number of the matrix samples of different sizes correlate with the low-level shock-thermal reworking of material consisting investigated achondrite in their metamorphic history.
5. The achondrite Pesyanoe matter during all his geology history, starting from the early irradiation in the regolith or more early environment conditions, do not underwent to influence of the shock-thermal events, stronger during the short-time interval. As it was obtained early the En group IV of the Pesyanoe probably undergoes a shock-pressure treatment with shock stage S1. This conclusion is confirmed by our TL study of experimentally shock loaded oligoclase, quartz and calcite.
In an article titled “Regolith history of the aubritic meteorite parent body revealed by neutron capture effects on Sm and Gd isotopes
The authors report the following in their abstract:
Quote:
Enstatite achondrites (aubrites) when compared to other stone meteorites have unusually long cosmic-ray exposure (CRE) ages. We report here the 150Sm/149Sm and 158Gd/157Gd ratios in six different structural phases, i.e., light and dark (shocked) grains and in matrix materials of Pesyanoe, in three different fragments from Pena Blanca Spring, and in one from Norton County, Shallowater, and Khor Temiki, to investigate the regolith history on the aubrite parent body.
The results from phases components of Pesyanoe confirm earlier reported evidence for regolith irradiation of several aubrites. The inferred neutron fluences for six Pesyanoe separates vary. The fluences also significantly exceed those expected from cosmic-ray irradiation during transit to Earth and approach those observed in the lunar regolith. These observations confirm that the brecciated Pesyanoe meteorite, which contains solar wind (SW) gases only in dark phases, was processed in a regolith and that structural phases were differentially irradiated before compaction.
On the other hand, in some aubrites (Mt. Egerton, Shallowater, Pena Blanca Spring, Norton County) neutron capture effects may entirely be due to space irradiation.
The pictures that follow are of the specimen of Pesyanoe in my collection. From what I’ve read in collection catalogues, this particular piece is the second largest sample of Pesyanoee in any collection in the world. A majority of the preserved Pesyanoe material, a sum around 1790g, still resides in the Academy of Sciences in Moscow, Russia.
The picture immediately below shows the dirty grey crust on my sample along with a classic Russian Academy of Sciences meteorite label consisting numbers on cloth tape. This specimen also arrived to me with a beautiful hand-written specimen card from the Academy of Science containing a matching specimen number.
My guess is that the circular greenish features on the crust are on top of large enstatite crystals.
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zagami
super member
   
Reged: 08/22/08
Posts: 165
Loc: The Big Sky
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This picture of Pesyanoe highlights some of the enstatite crystal texture likely produced by cosmic impact long ago in this meteorite's parent body history.
The few scattered orange-brown specks are oxidized metal also known as rust.
More crust can be seen hugging the edge visible along the right side of this specimen helping to define the absolute size of this partial individual.
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zagami
super member
   
Reged: 08/22/08
Posts: 165
Loc: The Big Sky
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With a centimeter cube for scale, flakey patches of fusion crust document that this specimen is the majority of a single individual stone.
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zagami
super member
   
Reged: 08/22/08
Posts: 165
Loc: The Big Sky
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Authors note:
I began this thread exactly one month ago. I had intended to provide a brief journey into my meteorites, as well as the history and science of the great stones and irons we collect. I hope I was successful.
Meteorite collecting is both and academic endeavor, as well as an inspirational one filled with awe and wonder. Each daily installment took quite a bit of time to prepare, so I hope you enjoyed them.
However, I’m going to take a break now to recapture my mornings and evenings. Therefore, I will set this thread aside for the moment and drift back into the role of casual contributor on this discussion board.
Thanks for reading.
-Martin
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Dick Lipke
super member
Reged: 02/20/07
Posts: 112
Loc: Marine City,Mich.
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Thanks for taking us along on your brief but beautiful journey,a journey I never thought I would ever be on or see in my life time.
Dick
-------------------- LX90 8",Cornado Max 40,Miyauchi 20x100 Bino's,and way to many eyepieces and filters,
Thousand Oaks 8" Ha filter
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Mike Sandy
Pooh-Bah
Reged: 08/29/03
Posts: 1096
Loc: SF Bay Area, CA
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Thanks for the many great reads Martin. This thread has been a highlight each day for me. Please know that the time and effort you've put into this has been appreciated - at least by me, and I believe by many more!!
Thanks again!
-------------------- Mike Sandy
http://www.DarkSights.com
Takahashi FRC-300, FS-78
Apogee U16M
Starfish Guider
Televue TV-102
Lunt LS60THaDS50/B1200
Baader Herschel Wedge
Paramount ME
Giro III on a Astro-Physics Tripod
AP SPL - 5mm, 6mm, 8mm, 10mm, 12mm
Ethos - 6mm, 8mm, 13mm, 17mm
Naglers - 16mm (x2)
Panoptic - 24mmm (x2)
AP/Baader Mark V
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bigbaldjoe
member
Reged: 09/21/07
Posts: 71
Loc: Bethlehem, Georgia
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Just so you know, each day when I logged into the computer here at school, the first thing I would do was to look and see what all Martin is teaching me.
Thank you once again.
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Glassthrower
Vendor - Galactic Stone & Ironworks
   
Reged: 04/07/05
Posts: 14601
Loc: Hurricane Alley
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Martin,
Take your time and you are always welcome here, regardless of your output in the forum. I am going to see if I can get one of the moderators of this particular forum to "sticky" this thread for future reference. This thread is the perfect introduction (for the newcomer meteorite fan) to show how interesting meteorites can be from a historical perspective. Well done. 
Regards and clear skies,
MikeG
-------------------- Michael Gilmer - Member of the Meteoritical Society & Collector of Falling Stars.
Galactic Stone & Ironworks - Buy/Sell/Trade Meteorites, Moon Rocks, Mars Rocks, & 35 different falls and types!
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zagami
super member
   
Reged: 08/22/08
Posts: 165
Loc: The Big Sky
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Wow MikeG. Thanks. And thanks to all others who voiced support for the installments.
I have a folder packed with more info and more pics, but my time right now is so limited that I knew I couldn't keep up with regular postings.
Anyway, I will add more as time allows, and I am grateful that the posts had an impact. (of course the pun is intended).
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csa/montana
Astro Ambassador
   
Reged: 05/14/05
Posts: 28272
Loc: montana
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Your thread is now a sticky! 
Thanks for all the work you've put into it, for the benefit of CN members!
-------------------- Carol
AstroTech 16" Dob (Thanks ASTRONOMICS!)
AstroTech 66ED / Vixen 80MF/AstroTech Voyager
Masuyama's 7.5, 15, 25W, 35mm,
Tak LE 5mm B/TMB 3.2
7mm Pentax XL, 10mm Pentax XW
14mm Meade 4000 UWA
22mm Pan, 35mm Pan
DreamCatcher Dobservatory, #2
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dgs©
Postmaster
   
Reged: 03/29/04
Posts: 13849
Loc: West Monroe, Louisiana
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Quote:
Wow MikeG. Thanks. And thanks to all others who voiced support for the installments.
I have a folder packed with more info and more pics, but my time right now is so limited that I knew I couldn't keep up with regular postings.
Anyway, I will add more as time allows, and I am grateful that the posts had an impact. (of course the pun is intended).
Take your time... we'll be here. 
I'll need to go back and re-read several times.
-------------------- - david
8"Ø Newtonian on SVP, Moonlite CR2, Telrad
PST Oberwerk Ultra 15x70 Orion Ultraview 10×50
Hand-me-down Sears Refractor (Discoverer) 60mm×900mm
"What we have done for ourselves alone dies with us; what we have done for others and the world, remains and is immortal." --Albert Pike
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