[meteorite-list] real men & meteorites
From: Jose Campos <josecamposcomet_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 22:10:29 -0000 Message-ID: <003801c75605$1a6dfef0$a7eb16d5_at_paular2wuci4vh> Hi Bernd, Martin and Jerry - and List: Many thanks for all the info and references on the Old Woman meteorite. Anyone knows who were the 3 gold prospectors? And there was no reward for them?? Does it means that the Smithsonian Institute of Washington has full rights over any meteorite that falls, or is found on federal land all over the entire USA? The info mentions that "...The nickel-iron mass lay wedged among boulders up a dry wash between two mountain slopes". Could it be that it probably fell somwhere further up and that it run downwards until it became wedged among boulders? Was this the only mass found in the area? Jos? ----- Original Message ----- From: <bernd.pauli at paulinet.de> To: <josecamposcomet at netcabo.pt> Sent: Wednesday, February 21, 2007 9:55 AM Subject: Re-2: [meteorite-list] real men & meteorites Hello Jos?, Martin, List: OLD WOMAN METEORITE (Sky & Telescope, Vol. 54-3, Sep 1997, p. 192): A three-ton meteorite recently discovered in the Old Woman Mountains of California is the second largest ever found in the United States, outranked only by the 16-ton Willamette, Oregon, meteorite known since 1902. The Old Woman fall is a mass of nickel-iron weighing 6,080 pounds (2,758 kilograms) and measuring 4-by-3-by-21/2 feet (1.2-by-0.9-by-0.8 meters), according to newspaper accounts. It fell, presumably several centuries ago, in an inaccessible desert area 170 miles east of Los Angeles. There it was spotted in March, 1976, by three gold prospectors. They sent chips to the Griffith Observatory and the University of California at Los Angeles, where the meteoritic nature of the object was confirmed. Word of the discovery reached Roy S. Clarke, curator of meteorites at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management determined that the find had been made on federal land, and gave possession of the meteorite to the Smithsonian. The nickel-iron mass lay wedged among boulders up a dry wash between two mountain slopes. On June 17th, the meteorite was airlifted from this spot by U.S. Marine Corps helicopter, which carried it seven miles to the nearest road. Until the end of June, the Old Woman meteorite was on public display at Riverside, California, and then it was sent to the Smithsonian Institution for scientific study. FUTRELL D.S.(1998) My visit with the Old Woman (Meteorite!, Feb 98, Vol. 4-1, pp. 34-35). NORTON O.R. (1994) The Old Woman Meteorite (Rocks From Space I, 1994, pp.252-255). NORTON O.R. (1998) The Old Woman Meteorite (Rocks From Space II, 1994, pp.252-255, 214). Best regards, Bernd To: josecamposcomet at netcabo.pt altmann at meteorite-martin.de meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com Received on Wed 21 Feb 2007 05:10:29 PM PST |
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