terry_g
Ultra Member
Several years ago myself and another mechanic were sent to a logging cut to replace the engine in a
grapple yarder. The engine had failed and the machine had spent the winter in the bush. The snow had
melted and we were able to drive up to the machine with the service truck. I took a walk around the area
and I found this small "rock" sitting on the deep moss in the trees. The moss was deep and the rock would
have disappeared into it in a few days. We were the first people there in several months so I am wondering
how it got there.
Its a bit bigger than a golf ball light and porous, it looks like lava. There is a lava flow about 30 km north of where I found
the rock but it has been inactive for hundreds of years. Is it a meteorite?
grapple yarder. The engine had failed and the machine had spent the winter in the bush. The snow had
melted and we were able to drive up to the machine with the service truck. I took a walk around the area
and I found this small "rock" sitting on the deep moss in the trees. The moss was deep and the rock would
have disappeared into it in a few days. We were the first people there in several months so I am wondering
how it got there.
Its a bit bigger than a golf ball light and porous, it looks like lava. There is a lava flow about 30 km north of where I found
the rock but it has been inactive for hundreds of years. Is it a meteorite?