[meteorite-list] NPA 11-05-1981 Prof says meteorite is industrial debris
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Oct 25 15:45:35 2004 Message-ID: <BAY4-F6n20lbhsKd6QR0001214b_at_hotmail.com> Paper: Gettysburg Times City: Gettysburg, Pennsylvania Date: Thursday, November 5, 1981 Page: 22 Prof says meteorite is just a piece of industrial debris NORTH ADAMS, Mass. (AP) - An eighth grader who thought he found a meteorite in his back yard is the owner of what appears to be a piece of industrial slag, a Harvard professor said Tuesday. “By no means is it a meteorite.” said Dr. John A. Wood, a professor of geology involved in research on meteorites at the Smithsonian Observatory, which is affiliated with Harvard. He examined the baseball-sized object the boy said had fallen into the family’s vegetable garden Halloween night. “It is certainly nothing out of the ordinary and seems to be a piece of slag from an industrial process.” Wood said. Anthony J. Sankis Jr., a 13-year-old amateur astronomer, had said he spotted a red fireball shooting across the sky as he was adjusting his telescope Halloween night. When he looked in the garden, Sarkis said he found a foot-wide crater containing a battered rock. The boy and his father took the rock to Woods for identification Tuesday morning after a physics professor at nearby North Adams State College agreed it may be a meteorite. During the weekend, a parade of curious people, including newspaper photographers, police and the mayor of North Adams, visited the Sarkis back yard to view the inch-deep crater. The family also maintained the object was still warm Sunday morning after a night outside, an occurrence Wood said “was simply impossible.” “I’m not into meteorites, but it looked very convincing to me.” the North Adams State professor, William G. Seeley, said Tuesday afternoon. “I told the boy’s parents to be very sure, because If it was a hoax it would be very easy to find out. “On the plus side, both my sons had seen a red track in the sky about the right time. Something tripped in my mind when the boy said he was an amateur astronomer and had been reading about meteorites, but I wasn’t sure whether he said he had been reading about then before or after he found the object and convinced myself that the latter has been the case. “It’s my feeling now that someone probably played a prank on the boy,” Seeley said, “although the way the thing was set up that’s almost as hard to believe as if it had actually happened.” (end) Clear Skies, Mark Bostick www.meteoritearticles.com Received on Mon 25 Oct 2004 01:36:01 PM PDT |
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