Which tells me it aint thermte, because thermite would produce nearly pure iron.
Since the sphereules are not pure iron, I fail to see how any person in good health, with an IQ over 100 could conclude that they werre produced by thermite.
Yes, but it would be quite possible that after the thermite reaction has produced tiny spheres
(1) with pure iron, but as these are initially hot and liquid, they would be rather likely to immediately react with ambient oxygen (burn), or corrode later on. So yes, there should be some elemental iron, but not necesserily so much.
My math is inadequate, but aren't the percentages of AlO2and SiO2correct for kaolin?
Don't go there. While kaolinite is probably not particularly rare in a building (in paper, paints...), it also is far from the only Al-Silicate. In my calculation, I was just thinking what compounds Al and Si would form in the simplest case, and that would be their respective oxides, Alumina and Silica. You are right of course that some of the Al and Si in Jones's or anybody's spheres are Aluminium Silicates. Kaolinite has a sum formula of Al
2Si
2O
5(OH)
4, or, if you ignore the H, Al
2Si
2O
9. You could split that off to Al
2O
3 + 2 SiO
2, and would be left with 2 more O-atoms. Makes a difference of something like 7 percent among these 3 elements, and less if you throw in all the rest. Since I was looking at iron proportions in increments of 10% of total sphere mass, that difference of a couple O-atoms between oxides and silicates doesn't matter.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FeO
Melting point 1377 °C
Footnote:
(1) Of course the bulk amounts of thermite charges would produce bulk amounts of reaction products, not spheres, but since we are talking about spheres here, I'll let that pass