Hello my friends and good day, it's always nice to see you go meteorite hunting and i really like when you find something and later show it , i am a meteorite hunter too and a meteorite collector i started collecting rocks on December 2023 i didn't know anything about rocks ,all this rocks i collect it one them actually was a meteorite after that i got in love with meteorites i started buying them i bought all kinds of microscopes and did months of studying and until now i found a lot of small meteorites very small, the bad thing is i live in small island and there is many vegetation so many trees and it's hard to find something , there is so many observed falls and actually videos of meteorites falling but all trees and grass of mountains so hard to find them i bet many meteorites are in the trees or grass weathering away, if i was in your place i would meteorite hunting for days. 😁 Good job on your finds i really enjoyed your video.
That sounds pretty tough. If you can afford to travel to a desert to hunt, it might be worth the trip? Depends on how much you like rocks. I'm amazed that you could find one on an island, that is very rare. Will you get it classified?
@@MeteoriteGallery Hello and good day sadly i can't go on a trip due to some health problems but it's okay, my country is Cyprus it's an island but not to small and there is so many observed falls and videos in many places i am not giving up there is a lot of places to look 🙂 Also my findings i would test them first to see what they are and then i will try classified them. There is one story i would love to tell you the specimen i have could be the most rare in the world , i will send you the story and photos in your email.
For non magnetic meteorites, are they found just by visual examination? Are magnetic and non magnetic meteorites found in the same area or are they usually found in distinctly different locations? Keep up the good content, I enjoy your channel.
Non-magnetic ones would include achondrites and some rare classes of chondrites. There's no easy way to identify them unless you see fusion crust or can recognize meteorite vs terrestrial rock textures. Hunting in places where odd rocks stand out can also help a lot...
Very cool hunt as always ❤
so cool ! magic place ! thank s a lot for us ! your video is a jouney with u merci
Inspirational 👏
Hello my friends and good day, it's always nice to see you go meteorite hunting and i really like when you find something and later show it , i am a meteorite hunter too and a meteorite collector i started collecting rocks on December 2023 i didn't know anything about rocks ,all this rocks i collect it one them actually was a meteorite after that i got in love with meteorites i started buying them i bought all kinds of microscopes and did months of studying and until now i found a lot of small meteorites very small, the bad thing is i live in small island and there is many vegetation so many trees and it's hard to find something , there is so many observed falls and actually videos of meteorites falling but all trees and grass of mountains so hard to find them i bet many meteorites are in the trees or grass weathering away, if i was in your place i would meteorite hunting for days. 😁 Good job on your finds i really enjoyed your video.
cool< good meteorite island
That sounds pretty tough. If you can afford to travel to a desert to hunt, it might be worth the trip? Depends on how much you like rocks. I'm amazed that you could find one on an island, that is very rare. Will you get it classified?
@@MeteoriteGallery Hello and good day sadly i can't go on a trip due to some health problems but it's okay, my country is Cyprus it's an island but not to small and there is so many observed falls and videos in many places i am not giving up there is a lot of places to look 🙂 Also my findings i would test them first to see what they are and then i will try classified them. There is one story i would love to tell you the specimen i have could be the most rare in the world , i will send you the story and photos in your email.
For non magnetic meteorites, are they found just by visual examination? Are magnetic and non magnetic meteorites found in the same area or are they usually found in distinctly different locations? Keep up the good content, I enjoy your channel.
Non-magnetic ones would include achondrites and some rare classes of chondrites.
There's no easy way to identify them unless you see fusion crust or can recognize meteorite vs terrestrial rock textures. Hunting in places where odd rocks stand out can also help a lot...