[meteorite-list] Meteorite research
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 11 Mar 2007 23:23:45 -0600 Message-ID: <BAY111-F14E3776D3F2CEE14933681B37D0_at_phx.gbl> Hello Barb (and list), <<<<"Mark, I?m new to the meteorite-list but surmise from reading that you?ve got a good handle on meteorite history. Do you have any insight into the following:" I am going to assume (you know what they say about that) and guess that you were directly this question to me, there are a few Marks here (but many more Mike's). I get a couple dozen like e-mails a month through my website, and I am somewhat a meteorite historian, so I am not going to far out here. <<<<"A piece of this specimen is at ASU for positive ID. It is stoney, does not attract a magnet, with lots of large condrules. The time (1881) may be off a few years. It belongs to a friend of ours." Glad to hear that. ASU will surely be able to tell you what it is...or at least if it is a meteorite. <<<<"In 1881 Andrew Jackson Warner was driving a stagecoach approximately fifteen miles west of Rose City Michigan when he heard what he described as a train passing over his head. Looking up he saw a large rock plunge to the ground in front and to the side of his route. He stopped the stage, got off and walked to where the rock had come to rest. It was slightly imbedded in the ground but was not hot enough to start a fire. He got back on the stage and drove to his destination ? Damon Michigan about nine miles away. <<<<He put the stage away then hooked the horses to a large wooden sled called a stone boat. He returned to the impact site and using the horses he pulled the rock upon the sled. He estimated it weighed about 900 pounds. He secured it to the sled with wire and pulled it into Damon and off loaded it at the Damon School Yard where it lay for over 75 years. Over the years about twenty pounds was chipped away for souvenirs. <<<<Warner?s great-great-great grandson retrieved it from the school yard and has it stored in a garage. The remaining mass and pieces total about 750 pounds. <<<<Damon was a logging camp which was abandoned years ago." Interestingly there is a Rose City, Michigan meteorite. It fell October 17th, 1921 and was the fourth meteorite known from Michigan, the second seen to fall. On the event you described, there is not much I can really tell you from what you have supplied. If I was given a date of the reported fall, I could check my archives for Michigan and area meteor reports from that time. I included a couple meteor reports below as a example. (For those outside of the US, Indiana is below Michigan.) I should also note that even if I could match up a date and a meteor report, there would of course be no way of proving the two events were related. Good luck with your submission, and should you have any other questions, feel free to ask myself, or the list in general. Clear Skies, Mark Bostick Wichita, Kansas http://www.meteoritearticles.com http://www.imca.cc Paper: Fort Wayne Daily Gazette City: Fort Wayne, Indiana Date: Sunday Morning, September 25, 1881 Page: 2 (of 8) Under "CITY NEWS." A meteor of surprising brilliancy was observed last night, falling due west at an angle of about 80 degrees, and disappearing from view in the northwest. It started falling at 11 h. 22 m. 33 s., Fort Wayne time, and finished 6 seconds later. To-day will be fine and clear though somewhat windy. (end) Paper: Fort Wayne Daily Gazette City: Fort Wayne, Indiana Date: Thursday Morning, October 6, 1881 Page: 2 (of 8) A Southern Meteor. Tuesday night about 10 o'clock the residents in the upper portion of the city were treated to a meteoric exhibition of wonderful brilliancy. The meteor seemed to shoot across the sky from south-west to north-east, its path being marked by a radiance far greater than that of the electric light. It finally exploded, sending out burning fragments or coruscations in every direction. The writer is informed by persons who saw the meteor that it was accompanied by a whizzing sound, and that the noise of the explosion was so loud that they momentarily expected to hear the fragments falling. (end) Received on Mon 12 Mar 2007 01:23:45 AM PDT |
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