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The Meteorite Cane by Michael Blood
Hunting meteorites in a known strewn field is both frustrating and very rewarding. It
is frustrating because finds are few and far between (unless you have the phenomenal luck of
searching a new fall!). If you average $1.00 per hour worth of material, you will be doing
quite well. On the rewarding side, there is absolutely nothing like finding a meteorite in the
field. When you first hold it in your hand you know it has traveled millions of miles and that
no human has ever touched it. It is an experience you will never forget. In addition, even
though many hours may pass between finds, it is very relaxing to be "on the hunt" with no time
lines, schedules, etc.., wieghing on your conciousness --- just you (and perhaps a friend) and
nature.
To make your hunting time infinitely more productive and enjoyable, it is essential
you make a meteorite cane. First you need to buy any cheep but decent cane at a thift or drug
store. Near the tip, about 1/2 inch up, fasten a very strong magnet with tape. About 99% of
all meteorites are moderately to strongly respnosive to a good magnet (most are strongly
responsive if the magnet is very strong). This makes checking any suspected candidates very
quick and easy as you tap about with the tip of the cane while walking at a decent clip.
Without a meteorite cane you would be stopping and bending over THOUSANDS of times, covering
far less area and taxing your back to the limit. Yes there are a few "hot rocks" that respond
to a strong magnet and are not meteoric, however they rarely look meteoric upon close
inspection. You just bring the tip of the cane up for a close look fot the tell tale fusion
crust, or lack there of!
When you do find a true meteorite it will jump out of the dirt
and "click" to the magnet. My nephew had a 40 gram Correo, which was 9/10's covered, dislodge
itself from a hardened earth to leap on to his cane with a "click" that will not soon be
forgotten!
Here's another tip: Computer hard drives contain one and sometimes two very strong magnets
(the older the drive, usually the stronger the magnet), so don't throw those old 400Mb drives away -> salvage them! [meteorite central]
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