[meteorite-list] NPA 01-20-1924 Out in the Arizona Desert...(Meteor Crater)
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed Jan 5 12:15:22 2005 Message-ID: <BAY4-F154EB23103574E26859962B3920_at_phx.gbl> Paper: Mansfield News City: Mansfield, Ohio Date: Sunday, January 20, 1924 Page: not sure OUT in the Arizona Desert, midway between the Grand Canyon and the Petrified Forest, scientists are engaged in a most unheard of pursuit. They are doing nothing less than seeking to unearth a vast treasure that fell from the sky - a hurried mass of mineral valued at $15,000,000 at the lowest possible estimate. The object in this strange search is not precious jewels, gold or silver, but iron - metal 90 to 91 per cent pure. These scientists took notice of this nomad from the skies in 1891, when Dr. A. E. Foote, the mineralogist, made a survey of the region. Some idea of the cataclysmic force of the impact can be had from the extent of the scar left - a crater-like depression 600 feet deep and 1,000 feet in diameter, with a rim raised up 160 feet above the plain. The meteor itself, is thought to be at least 300 feet in diameter, although some experts believe it would even quadruple this figure. That the search for this mass of mineral is more than a scientific undertaking is indicated by the fact that a large and wealthy mining corporation has financed the project. Expert drillers from the California oil fields were set to work and, after more than a year of driving, it is now probable that the objective has been reached at a depth of 1,400 feet. At this level the drill recoiled with a loud clang and came up worn smooth by a substance no man-forged metal can match. If this is the "parent" meteorite, and it corresponds in composition with those heretofore analyzed, it contains, according to estimate of a contributor to Current Opinion, 90 to 91 per cent of fine iron, not ore, but pure; 8 per cent nickel, worth 30 cents a pound, and not now produced in the United States; one-fifth ounce of platinum, worth approximately $110 per ounce, to each ton; a small percentage of iridium, even more valuable, and microscopic diamonds. Roughly speaking, the content is counted as worth $50 per ton. Should it weigh but a thousandth of the 300,000,000 tons of rock it scattered, its value would be $15,000,000, a sum to tempt the most cautious speculator. It was once thought that the pit in which the boring is being made was of volcanic origin, and the meteoric fragments that lay about it and lent color to the meteor theory merely a coincidence. (end) Clear Skies, Mark Bostick Wichita, Kansas http://www.meteoritearticles.com http://www.kansasmeteoritesociety.com http://www.imca.cc http://stores.ebay.com/meteoritearticles PDF copy of this article, and most I post, is available upon e-mail request. Received on Wed 05 Jan 2005 12:14:35 PM PST |
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