[meteorite-list] Lawrencite
From: mexicodoug at aim.com <mexicodoug_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 19:44:04 -0400 Message-ID: <8CACA2345769418-304-858_at_MBLK-M13.sysops.aol.com> Hi Bernd and Pauline :), and meteoriteoids, All fine here Bernd and thanks for the very friendly note. Thanks, too, for the kind clarification on "Lawrencite". It was worth it to me as you prompted me to look up the very interesting bio of Dr. John Lawrence Smith (and note his German connection, as well)! Always one to look for a conspiracy, what I'm curious about is how he got a reputed compound in meteoritics named after his middle name? Something doesn't feel too right. I wonder if there is a story there, as it seems too exceptional. I see he preferred to be called by his middle name Lawrence, perhaps, all the variants of the surname's Smithite were already taken? It is interesting to note that he was very vocal about his belief that the origin of meteorites was ... the Moon. But, this is 100 to 150 years ago ... it wasn't a slap in his face ... this Lawrencite, was it, from a satirical cohort? Dr. Smith seems like a brilliant academic and true field guy who hunted meteorites from Sultanates of the middle East in the 1800's to his area of specialty in Kentucky and the Southeastern United States. I think most noteworthy above all was his intellectually complementary relationship he shared with his trusted and loved field companion who accompanied him on his adventures everywhere : his wife Sarah. In honor of her husband, upon his death, Sarah established and endowed the J. Lawrence Smith Medal for investigations of meteoric bodies. She did it in a nice way: sold his collection of 250 falls to Harvard for $8,000, then turned around and donated the money to an endowment funding a prize in his name: The J. Lawrence Smith Medal has been a cash prize of $25,000 since last given in 2003 and 2006, and it is not administered by the 'mere' Meteoritical Society, oh, no, but rather by the club of the truly American elite: the National Academy of Science (as in NAS, PNAS) !!! Somehow that as very inspiring as it could be envious. The first recipient of the medal was in 1888: HUBERT ANSON NEWTON (1830-1896, as related by Newton's NAS biographer, J. Williard Gibbs (Yes - the same brilliant guy who nailed town thermodynamics for chemists). I believe Newton was the one who named meteoroids, well, "meteoroids". That particular 1888 J.L. Smith prize went to Newton for doing a thorough analysis of 210 distinct recovered meteorites and determining constraints of their orbits, nearly 100 years before "Lost City". He made interesting comments suggesting that meteorites in collections were not entering Earth's atmosphere in retrograde (against) orbits with Earth, but rather with (prograde) Earth, and that material entering in retrograde matter could not survive due to material constraints, as a meteorite. (really this is a must read and has a lot of meat behind it) Newton also set up what I believe was the first meteor/fireball network of observers for collaboration and determined the triangulated heights of Leonids and Perseids, among others. Upon accepting his Lawrencite Medal, errr- John Lawrence Smith Medal, Newton made the profound statement: "To discover some new truth in nature, even if it concerns the small things in the world, gives one of the purest pleasures of human experience. It gives joy to tell others of treasure found." WOW! How beautifully said. I wonder how Dr. J. Lawrence Smith would have reacted to the second to last J. Lawrence Smith Medal in 2003 given for the origins of meteorites, etc. , given his strong Lunar origin belief. Naw, I'm sure he would have been a step ahead of the best ... PS Bernd - Cheers to Sarah, Pauline, Gloria and the rest of the gang! Best wishes, Doug Off to Pursue Perseids ... -----Original Message----- From: bernd.pauli at paulinet.de To: Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com Sent: Mon, 11 Aug 2008 4:03 pm Subject: [meteorite-list] Lawrencite Hi Doug, Hope you and Gloria are fine. We are o.k. here, especially me now that I am a *retired* teacher and so I have all the time in the world to do things I couldn't do when I was a teacher. My Pauline and I, we'll start off with this year's Mineral and Gem Show in Munich, maybe Tuscon next year, and maybe Ensisheim next year. No "good luck" re: Perseids so far ... it's been raining for hours, doesn't look good tonight :-( Regarding St. Lawrence and "lawrencite" ... no, he's not that chloride demon. "lawrencite" refers to the American chemist John Lawrence Smith (1818-1883) who was also a mineralogist and discovered this reputed FeCl2 in meteorites. Oh, oh, it has just restarted to rain heavily :-( Let's hope you have perfect skies in Mexico! Best from a happy ex-teacher, Bernd ______________________________________________ http://www.meteoritecentral.com Meteorite-list mailing list Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Mon 11 Aug 2008 07:44:04 PM PDT |
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