Guest guest Posted May 7, 2009 Report Share Posted May 7, 2009 Sorry Mr Jay I did not conclude properly or conclusevily to your Questions. The tumbled ball from a piece about 66kg (1810), which I believed was from a rock from Altai /Kunlun, Humbolt mountain range of Siberia, Monogolia and Tibet, as the family was based in Yangoon, then, and trade with Chinese and South East Asia, for teak, sandalwood,rice and Burmese imperial jade, rubies, and other gems were prominent activities (of the family). The reason for tumbling I assume was to keep it as a relic, if they had not tumbled, I would not think, it would have survives the vissicitudes of time, war,civil unrest, and immigrantion, and may have cause later generations to throw as a piece of old rock The Specific Gravity: 8-9 g/cm3 (as total SG) The MOH: 8 The final general classification of this type (Genus) is Mesosiderites (The most mysterious of meteorites) The other most mysterious meteorite are Vermillion Mesosiderites (aka Syamanataka ??-Sun God's Rubies ???), another glowing bright deep blue greenish radiance mystery meteorite Read about it http://www.e-pages.dk/ku/127/66 Thanks sacred-objects , Jay Munshi <jaymunshi wrote: > > Hello Sir, > > Very interesting stone. Any Gemological tests conducted on it? SG, Hardness etc? > > best regards, > > Jay > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 7, 2009 Report Share Posted May 7, 2009 Dear Bala Songyi Ji Greetings Interesting. I was fascinated by reading the name of Syamantak Mani. It was the Mani mentioned in Bhaagvat Puraan. It used to give lots of gold everyday but it was to be kept with very cleanliness. Are ytou talking about the same Syamantak Mani? With regards Sushma sacred-objects , " bala_songyi " <balasongyi wrote: > > Sorry Mr Jay > I did not conclude properly or conclusevily to your Questions. > > The tumbled ball from a piece about 66kg (1810), which I believed was from a rock from Altai /Kunlun, Humbolt mountain range of Siberia, Monogolia and Tibet, as the family was based in Yangoon, then, and trade with Chinese and South East Asia, for teak, sandalwood,rice and Burmese imperial jade, rubies, and other gems were prominent activities (of the family). > The reason for tumbling I assume was to keep it as a relic, if they had not tumbled, I would not think, it would have survives the vissicitudes of time, war,civil unrest, and immigrantion, and may have cause later generations to throw as a piece of old rock > > The Specific Gravity: 8-9 g/cm3 (as total SG) > > The MOH: 8 > > The final general classification of this type (Genus) is > Mesosiderites (The most mysterious of meteorites) > > The other most mysterious meteorite are > Vermillion Mesosiderites (aka Syamanataka ??-Sun God's Rubies ???), another glowing bright deep blue greenish radiance mystery meteorite > > Read about it > http://www.e-pages.dk/ku/127/66 > > Thanks > > > > sacred-objects , Jay Munshi <jaymunshi@> wrote: > > > > Hello Sir, > > > > Very interesting stone. Any Gemological tests conducted on it? SG, Hardness etc? > > > > best regards, > > > > Jay > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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