[meteorite-list] NPA 01-15-1970 Scientists Agog over (Lost City) Meteorite
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Oct 22 11:26:04 2004 Message-ID: <BAY4-F8g2Af0Gh331DP000039e9_at_hotmail.com> Paper: News Journal City: Mansfield, Ohio Date: Thursday, January 15, 1970 Page: 5 Scientists Agog over Meteorite By VICTOR COHN WASHINGTON (PTS) Space watchers have rushed to Washington for study of what a Aeronautics and Space Administration official calls the "freshest meteorite ever examined." Studying a meteorite quickly is especially important to biologists, looking for chemical forms that might reveal the beginning of life elsewhere in the solar system. Meteorites lying on the ground quickly become contaminated by earthly molecules. The new meteorite was spotted falling in the mid west sky Jan. 3 by some of the 16 automatic telescopes of the seven-state Prairie Network, a joint NASA-Smithsonian astrophysical observatory operation. Six days later the remnant of the Jan, 3 falling star was found near Lost City, Okla. - the first ever found by the network though thousands have been photographed. It weighs 22.6 pounds and is said to be "slightly magnetic." Eight billion meteors strike the earth's atmosphere everyday, but all but five to 10 burn out before reaching the ground. And only a few of these are discovered, usually too late for some kinds of study. The Prairie Network was established in 1962 and started operating in 1964, both to photograph meteorites and to try to find them. Its telescopes operate nightly in Iowa, Illinois, Kansas, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota. Operations are directed from the astrophysical laboratory's Cambridge, Mass. headquarters. (end) Clear Skies, Mark Bostick www.meteoritearticles.com Received on Fri 22 Oct 2004 11:25:17 AM PDT |
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