[meteorite-list] Wichita Eagle on Haviland Festival
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun Jul 9 18:18:46 2006 Message-ID: <BAY111-F22882AFB87338CD0C69A4FB36A0_at_phx.gbl> http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/news/state/14998975.htm?source=rss&channel=kansas_state The rock stops at Haviland for town's meteorite festival BY BECCY TANNER The Wichita Eagle HAVILAND - Several hundred people turned out Saturday in Haviland to gaze at meteorites in the city's first meteorite festival. American flags lined Main Street and fluttered in the wind as clowns dressed as meteorite hunters walked in the parade, onlookers cheered a pickup truck carrying a load of meteorites and motorcycle riders revved their engines in celebration of the celestial rocks. Mayor Jeff Christensen wants to make the festival an annual event that draws people from around the world to look at first-class meteorites. And on Saturday, much of his dream came true. Cars and pickups with license plates from Colorado, Nebraska, Missouri and Texas lined the streets. The festival, whose motto is "The Rock Stops Here," featured booths of meteorites, jewelry and displays on how meteorites have been found in Kiowa County and why people may someday know it as the meteorite capital of the nation. "Isn't it exciting to see something nobody else has seen before?" Christensen said. "There's something about these rocks that's fun. I know there are other meteorites found in other states, but if you go by weight, we'd win. Why, in Texas, their meteorites are the size of marbles. We've got boulders." Scientists estimate that the meteor that fell in Kiowa County some 20,000 years ago weighed 500 tons and was 20 feet across. At least 95 percent of it most likely burned or evaporated as it fell to Earth. But not all of it. If you do the math, said Haviland farmer and meteorite hunter Don Stimpson, "there could still be a lot out there." So far, 10 tons have been mined from the Kiowa County black sand, leaving an estimated 15 to 40 tons still to locate. And when farming doesn't always turn a quick profit, some Kiowa County farmers think those rare meteorites their neighbors have been digging up may be a way to ensure their future. The Brenham meteorites, named for Brenham Township near Haviland, are some of the best known and sought after in the world because of their crystals, which look like stained glass when cut. The township became known for its unusual meteorites in the late 1880s, when Eliza Kimberly found them on her Kiowa County farm. Saturday's festival featured Steve Arnold, who made worldwide news last fall when he found a 1,400-pound meteorite in a field west of Haviland. He brought the famous rock back to Saturday's festival after displaying it in Texas and Arizona. It will be on display Monday at the Kansas Cosmosphere in Hutchinson. "There is more to be found out there," Arnold said. Haviland farmer Paul Ross dug a 1,500-pound meteorite up on his land three weeks ago. He hopes to sell it for $200 a pound. Price Gibbons of Pratt brought his 130-pound meteorite to the festival hoping to see what it was worth. His said it was discovered years ago and used to sit in a Pratt pool hall, then in his yard. But now, since it might be worth something, he said, "I take better care of it." Ashton Harrison, 7, of Karval, Colo., bought some meteorite chunks at the festival. "They are ugly," he told his grandmother, Carol Tucker of Hooker, Okla. "But I'll take them to show and tell." (end) Received on Sun 09 Jul 2006 06:18:43 PM PDT |
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