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2) The Magnet test: Only crystalline substances show significant magnetic properties, and tektites have essentially no crystals. Further, oxygen is one of the volatiles that partitions out of the liquid glass phase in the extreme conditions of tektite formation; Hence, available iron occurs in a highly reduced state, literally dissolved in the glass. In terrestrial obsidian, iron often occurs as crystalline magnetite, an oxide.Using fairly sophisticated equipment, I have verified that tektites have magnetic susceptibilities that are often an order of magnitude or more lower than terrestrial glasses. This difference is sufficiently large that it can be detected with a strong magnet.Hang a good Neodymium-Samarium magnet on a thread, then pass your suspect material close by. If there is any visible deflection of the magnet pendulum, it is not a tektite. This is conclusive. If nothing happens, the test is inconclusive, but permissive. There is reason to expect that all tektites will be non-magnetic, but not all non-magnetic materials are tektites.What if Fe-Ni sphereoids are present? I'm not absolutely certain, but suspect that their concentration is virtually always too low to detect magnetically.3) Transmitted light color Test: A meteorite list respondent passed along word that the late, great tektite enthusiast, Darryl Futrell, used transmitted light color as a screening criterion. While many tektites appear opaque black in reflected light, all will transmit light along thin edges with strong backlighting. Check the color.Australasian , Ivory Coast, Tibetan, and Bediasite tektites are a molasses-brown with greenish tinges...
... a former professor (and a personal hero of mine) wrote an article of ejecta from impact cratersTerrestrial implication of layering, bubble shape and minerals along faults in tektite origin Virgil E. BarnesBureau of Economic Geology, The University of Texas, Austin USAReceived 4 February 1964. Geochem. ActaAbstractBoth detrital mineral grains and minerals which crystallized in situ were first found in tektites along faults in Muong Nong-type indochinites from Kan Luang Dong, Thailand. The detrital mineral grains have the optical properties of quartz and are within the size range of quartz abundant in local soil and rock. Such a correspondence in grain size strongly implies that the tektites from Kan Luang Dong are locally derived. Layered tektites are probably the result of the accumulation in puddles of melt from flash fusion of bare patches of soil and rock. The faulting took place while the melt was very hot and the evidence for this is: (1) perfect welding of the fault-fractures with detrital grains equally embedded in the glass on either side of the welds, (2) growth of minerals along the faults, and (3) warping of the fault planes by movement of the melt following faulting.It is my hypothesis that this is ejecta from an impact site that did not get totally melted, but only mostly melted. This piece is a bit of country rock (surface rock) ejected from the crater that is mostly glass but still retains characteristic of the original rock.The button is formed (I am finally answering your question) in the same way as the buttons in the bottom part of the black and white picture above - by aerodynamic shaping of the partially melted rock entering the atmosphere. The pits all over it are places where material has ablated from the rock while it was reentering the atmosphere.The fact that it is so hard, heavy and has aerodynamic shape TO ME indicate only an origin formed in the atmosphere.
The rock Baily has posted it a dumbbell shaped tektite with a button on it.
It is my hypothesis that this is ejecta from an impact site that did not get totally melted, but only mostly melted. This piece is a bit of country rock (surface rock) ejected from the crater that is mostly glass but still retains characteristic of the original rock.The button is formed ... in the same way as the buttons in the bottom part of the black and white picture above - by aerodynamic shaping of the partially melted rock entering the atmosphere. The pits all over it are places where material has ablated from the rock while it was reentering the atmosphere.The fact that it is so hard, heavy and has aerodynamic shape TO ME indicate only an origin formed in the atmosphere.
i would still like to send it to you
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