[meteorite-list] News Release Arizona
From: Rick Nowak <internationalmeteoritesociety_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Thu Apr 22 09:55:51 2004 Message-ID: <20020125224350.13875.qmail_at_web21007.mail.yahoo.com> NEWS RELEASE ARIZONA UNKNOWN TO GENERAL PUBLIC. I sent this out to 5 Arizona Newspapers. Maybe someone in the community would like to take advantage of this before the general public does.Will the papers print? I can't say but............ NEWS RELEASE Dear Editor, Meteorites are worth anywhere from % cents a gram to thousands of dollars per gram. Enclosed is information that will make a great story and lead to the possible recovery of a lost meteorite. Worth thousands upon thousands of dollars. From Find A Falling Star Harvey Nininger page 127 There were so many tantalizing reports, and one of the most intriguing and convincing was a tale told to me in Prescott Arizona about 1940. I had gone into a bar on one of my customary tours of community hangouts seeking likely individuals with likely stories. I laid a nickel-iron meteorite on the bar beside a man who was drinking a bottle of beer. He looked it over carefully. "Are they worth anything?" I told him they were. He stood, looking past me for a moment, as if gathering details out of his memory. then he pointed to the cigarer vending machine. "I found one as big as that machine one time, but it's been fifteen years ago." He stroked the little specimen before him on the counter. "It was iron just like that, and had dents in it just like that, and when I hit it with my hammer it sounded just like an anvil. I know it was the very same thing." He had been a surveyor at the time and was running a line for the government. He told me what line it was. They came to a ravine they couldn't cross and he had gone south about a quarter mile to where it could be negotiated-and there in the ditch was this great hunk of iron. Neither he nor I had the time or money to make a ten day trip to the spot at the time, and I never was able to contact him again. Somehow I lost the notes I scribbled down, including the man's name. I had fully intended to follow up this lead, having him guide me to the spot. The territory in which he was working is seldom visited by anyone except deer hunters, and it may be a hundred years before another man see that great iron-if it really exists. Of all the hundred of reports I investigated in my years of meteorite hunting, more than a hundred yielded meteorites, and the other hundreds were dud. Few of the productive tales were more convincing than this man's reports. It is my believe he had found Arizona's finest meteorite. CONCLUSIONS The line was a Government line not a state line. the surveyor was working for the Government. The line must be very long. Needed 1o days 1 day driving 2 days walking line 6 days pulling out meteorite and 1 day going home. Nininger did not recall he would have to deal with an Indian council. Public hunting was allowed in the area. Do the Indians allow the general public to hunt their land? Go to www.arizonaroads.com/maps/ and look at the 1927 Arizona highway map. The only Government lines arew Indian reservations and the Grand canyon. The surveyor said 16 years ago 1940 minus 15 equals 1925 FOCUS should be on the North line of the Grand Canyon running East and West during the year of 1925 and not the modern day lines Best of success to all Rick __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Great stuff seeking new owners in Yahoo! Auctions! http://auctions.yahoo.com Received on Fri 25 Jan 2002 05:43:50 PM PST |
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