Find Valuable Meteorites with Rare Earth Magnets
Super Magnets - A New Tool for Meteorite Collecting
By Stephen Joltin, published May 12, 2008
Published Content: 162 Total Views: 109,727 Favorited By: 120 CPs
While I was there, I took the crater rim tour but was not allowed to take away even one of the millions of meteorite fragments that lie on the surface up to 10 miles away from the crater itself.
Luckily, I had the foresight to bring along two very powerful rare earth magnets attached to 15 pound test monofilament fishing line. Just outside the property which belongs to the current owners of Meteor Crater, I walked about 100 feet from the road with the magnets dangling behind me. Each magnet had the attractive power of well over ten pounds for any nickel or iron based substance.
In less than ten minutes I had found 30 meteorite fragments made out of nickel and iron and ranging from 10 grams to 35 grams. They were attached to the magnets along with many smaller specimens which I put back on the ground. I still have some of these specimens in my meteorite collection. The rest I sold on eBay. I would have searched longer but my wife was getting bored with me running around the desert.
Many people mistakenly call these specimens meteors rather than meteorites. However the definition of a meteor is an extraterrestrial rock which is still in space or which burns up when it enters our atmosphere. A meteorite is a part or all of this extraterrestrial material which actually reaches the Earth's surface and can be found by people who look in the areas where the main mass of the meteor has been known to have fallen. This area is called the strewn field.
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Takeaways
- Meteorites are collectible and still easy to find using super magnets
- Meteorites can also be purchased on eBay
- Visit exotic places and earn some extra money
Did You Know?
The meteor that formed Meteor Crater, Arizona exploded with the force of a 2.5 megaton nuclear device 50,000 years ago.
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