[meteorite-list] The tale of a falling star
From: Galactic Stone & Ironworks <meteoritemike_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2009 10:35:23 -0400 Message-ID: <e51421550906100735i56084c4fh2b7c66356d717148_at_mail.gmail.com> Great post Sterling! Thanks for the links too. :) On 6/10/09, Sterling K. Webb <sterling_k_webb at sbcglobal.net> wrote: > Doug said: >> I am thinking [of] Greece, Cyprus and Turkey, but no meteorite comes >> to mind. > > I'm sure Doug named those places because > there were famous meteorites of religious > significance associated with sites there. While > it is true that their whereabouts is presently > unknown [and will likely remain that way), there's > no doubt whatsoever about their existence. > > So, no, no ancient ruins "yielded" authenticated > meteorites. You see, there was this obscure > religious cult that took over and tried, with great > success, to destroy all traces of any previous > religious worship, temples, shrines, relics, and > so forth. > > No meteorite survivors of Greece and Rome are > known. > > However, there are pieces of the "Black Stone" of > the Kaa'ba, a meteorite, in Turkey (by a List memeber): > http://kauscience.k12.hi.us/~ted/Blackstone/hajar-al-aswad.htm > > The meteoritic nature (or non-nature) of a famous > Temple stone is discussed by another List member: > http://imca.repetti.net/articles/IMCA-Insights4.htm > > Evidence in coinage of Temple stones, some of which > were meteorites, can be found here (more List members): > http://www.pibburns.com/catastro/metstamp.htm#classicalcoins > > A discussion of various meteoritic Temple stones can be > found here (Popular ASstronomy, 1936, at ADS): > http://articles.adsabs.harvard.edu//full/1936PA.....44..514W/0000514.000.html > > Traditionally, the Classical Temple stones were > "nose-cone" shaped. In a word, oriented (if they were > meteorites). There is a fascinating discussion of why > the baetyls that are found are not actually meteorites. > The explanation? Lots of shrines, but not so many > meteorites! > http://www.ancients.info/forums/showthread.php?t=845 > > Everybody wants a meteorite for their Temple, ya know? > > > > Sterling K. Webb > -------------------------------------------------------------------- > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Mexicodoug" <mexicodoug at aim.com> > To: <Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> > Sent: Tuesday, June 09, 2009 10:40 PM > Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] The tale of a falling star > > >> Great article, though this paragraph about other "meteors" being found >> need editing: >> >> "Other meteors have been located in ancient ruins of the Americas, as >> well as around the world, ranging in size from the three ounce >> Pojoaque meteorite, found in an ancient pottery bowl near Santa Fe, >> N.M., to the 3,407-pound Casas Grandes iron discovered in an Inca ruin >> near Chihuahua, Mexico." >> >> The Incas, of course are not from Chihuahua, but a good fraction of a >> world away in Peru ... The author is referring to the Paquim? pueblo >> of the probably Anasazi Pueblo type Indians (Like from the US >> southwest), though they may have had a tad more of Aztec influence. >> And the meteorite is from INSIDE Chihuahua (the state), and NEAR >> Nuevas Casas Grandes. It was found far from Chihuahua City actually >> much closer to Arizona which is just 93 miles away. Political >> boundaries...bah :-) >> >> Does anyone recall what other ancient ruins yielded authenticated >> meteorites outside the Americas as claiming by the article they are >> found "all around the world in ancient ruins". I am thinking Greece, >> Cyprus and Turkey, but no meteorite comes to mind. And the Japanese >> one was certainly not found in ruins. >> >> Another tear shed today after reading about the other Grand Canyon >> fragment... >> >> "In 1953, after America abandoned Route 66, Nininger moved his >> collection to Sedona, where it was put on display in the Verde Valley >> for the first time in nearly 800 yea >> rs." >> >> One (at least me) wonders whether the "800 year buried piece of Canyon >> Diablo (Camp Verde piece)" was ever at all "on display" on the Native >> American Sinagua or if it was placed to rest with that stone >> ceremonially out of sight with respects being rendered specifically >> NOT to be displayed, I am not sure how this statement about displaying >> could be made in the article with any accuracy, and suppose the author >> really got carried away trying to say the Camp Verde piece is on >> display in the Verde Vally of AZ...but not sure; thanks for the post! >> >> Best wishes, >> Doug >> >> >> -----Original Message----- >> From: Michael Groetz <mpg4444 at gmail.com> >> To: Meteorite List <Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com> >> Sent: Tue, 9 Jun 2009 8:37 pm >> Subject: [meteorite-list] The tale of a falling star >> >> >> >> http://verdenews.com/main.asp?SectionID=1&subsectionID=1&articleID=31230 >> >> The tale of a falling star >> By Steve Ayers, Staff Reporter >> >> Tuesday, June 09, 2009 >> >> CAMP VERDE - George Dawson was no stranger to hard work. >> >> A seasoned construction hand, he traveled extensively throughout >> Central America and the American southwest, moving mountains for money >> and, when time allowed, doing some digging on his own for both fun and >> profit. >> >> In the spring of 1927, Dawson found himself between jobs. A Phoenix >> resident, he loaded his truck with supplies and tools of his trade, >> and headed north, hoping the fertile ground of the Verde Valley would >> surren >> der its ancient treasures. >> >> Pothunters like Dawson knew the valley to be a steady source of income >> for anyone willing to turn over a few stones. >> >> For this trip he chose a uniquely constructed ruin located on a >> windswept, five-acre mesa above West Clear Creek. >> >> With a view of the entire valley, the outline of its crumbled walls >> looked more like a stockade than a home, a nearly square perimeter of >> rooms surrounding a common courtyard. >> >> Latter-day archaeologists believe the pueblo was built by people of >> the Salado culture, indigenous to the Salt River Valley, instead of >> the native Sinagua whose former homes make up the bulk of the Verde's >> ancient architecture. >> >> A very good day >> >> One day while searching through rubble in the northeast corner of one >> room, Dawson spied a familiar structure -- one that led him to believe >> it was going to be a good day -- a very good day. >> >> The flat slab of sandstone at his feet, he knew to be the cover of a >> burial cyst, just the right size to contain the body of a child, along >> with whatever treasures the family had packed along for the afterlife. >> >> Dawson slid the cover back and began clearing the accumulated dirt and >> debris. Eighteen inches down he uncovered a layer of feathers. As he >> gently scraped away he realized in was a blanket of feathers, wrapped >> about the cherished treasure. >> >> An hour or so later, having cleared out all but the feather blanket >> and its contents, he reached20in and gently lifted the bundle. >> >> It pulled back. >> >> A second more forceful tug and Dawson realized it was not the >> lightweight body of the child he had expected. >> >> With great difficulty, he wrestled the object from its grave, pulled >> back the delicate feather blanket and found himself gazing at a >> two-foot long, one-foot wide, five-inch thick, 135-pound, oddly-shaped >> hunk of rusting rock. >> >> Dawson had an idea of what he was looking at, but it was not until >> several months later, after it was tested, that he knew for sure. The >> object so delicately wrapped and reverently placed in the stone cyst >> was a nickel-iron meteorite, or what meteorite collectors call simply, >> an iron. >> >> The second journey >> >> To date, know one knows how it got there. >> >> We do know that Dawson sold it in 1939 to one of the preeminent >> meteorite researchers and collectors of his day, Harold Harlow >> Nininger, who dubbed it the Camp Verde Meteorite. Convention dictated >> it be named for the closest post office or geological feature. >> >> We also know that in 1959 Nininger sold the meteorite, along with more >> than 700 others, to Arizona State University, where it is currently >> housed in the school's meteorite collection at ASU's Center for >> Meteorite Studies. >> >> What significance the object held to the architecturally unique souls >> who once lived on Wingfield Mesa, we will likely never know. >> Archaeologists have uncovered feather blankets, and several >> meteorites, in archaeological digs. >> Dawson is the only one to have >> found both of them together. >> >> Religious significance >> >> A year after Dawson's find, two pothunters discovered another >> meteorite in a stone cyst, or at least 40 to 50 pounds of fragments >> thereof, in a ruin east of Flagstaff. It became known as the Winona >> Meteorite and is now on display at the museum of Northern Arizona. >> >> Other meteors have been located in ancient ruins of the Americas, as >> well as around the world, ranging in size from the three ounce >> Pojoaque meteorite, found in an ancient pottery bowl near Santa Fe, >> N.M., to the 3,407-pound Casas Grandes iron discovered in an Inca ruin >> near Chihuahua, Mexico. >> >> As Peter Pilles, archaeologist for the Coconino National Forest, has >> observed, when archaeologists are uncertain about an object's use or >> importance, they give it religious significance. >> >> But in the case of the Camp Verde meteorite, with its feather >> wrappings and the fact it was stored in the same manner as human >> remains, there can be little doubt it was held in reverence. >> >> Scientific questions >> >> Lawrence Garvie, director of meteorite collection at ASU, is a >> scientist both by nature and by training. But even he can't help but >> speculate on the meteorite's unusual shape and significance. >> >> "It looks to me more like a child than a leaf or an arrowhead, as some >> have described it. It has a distinctive head and shoulders, and a very >> pronounced backbone that appears to have been rubbed smooth by human >> touch. And when struck it has a beautiful ringing sound," Garvie says. >> >> For scientists like Garvie, and the Center for Meteorites Studies >> founder and former director, Carleton Moore, the meteorite also poses >> some real world questions, not the least of which is where did it fall >> and how did it end up in the ruins of an ancient pueblo. >> >> About 50,000 years ago, a 150-foot diameter, 300,000-ton, iron and >> nickel meteorite crashed into Canyon Diablo outside of modern-day >> Winslow, creating Meteor Crater. The impact vaporized at least half >> and scattered the remaining pieces across a wide area of the Colorado >> Plateau. >> >> "The interesting thing about Camp Verde is that it does not look like >> the other Canyon Diablo irons," Moore says. "Its chemistry, however, >> is identical. So the only conclusion we can make is that it is a piece >> of Canyon Diablo. >> >> "But I have always had my doubts. The other great puzzle is also how >> did it get so far from Meteor Crater. The nomadic people who lived in >> Arizona didn't lug these sorts of things around." >> >> Garvie and Moore both believe it is possible the Camp Verde meteorite >> was a fragment that separated from the main mass of the Canyon Diablo >> meteorite as it broke apart in the atmosphere, landing farther south. >> >> Fact or fiction >> >> As for the fate of the feather blanket, it was parceled out and lost. >> According to a correspondence from Dawson to Nininger, he (Dawson) >> gave away pieces of the blanket=2 >> 0to collectors over the years. >> >> It would seem possible that the entire story of the Camp Verde >> meteorite is pure fiction, dreamt up by Dawson to make an otherwise >> common iron meteorite more valuable, were it not for statements in a >> narrative Nininger later wrote. >> >> Nininger notes he never heard the story of the meteorite's discovery >> until he came to Phoenix to make the purchase. There is also the fact >> that he bought it for what he described as no more than "the price >> usually paid for Canyon Diablo irons ($0.50 per pound)." >> >> Lastly, in April 1940, at Nininger's request, Dawson brought him to >> Camp Verde to see the pueblo and search for feathers or the remains of >> the cyst. >> >> "We hunted the long line of obscure ruins until he reached the >> crumbled walls of a small room, in the corner of which was a slight >> depression and several flat stones protruding from the drifted dust >> and debris. >> >> "Digging out the filling of dust and weeds failed to reveal a shred of >> the feather cloth wrapping, but this was hardly surprising...We >> gathered the flat stones and made several trips down the steep slope >> to the car and back again," Nininger states. >> >> Final journey >> >> The ancient owners of the Camp Verde meteorite may or may not have >> lugged it around in their travels, but Nininger did. For seven years >> following its purchase, he continued to search the planet for what had >> fallen from the heavens. >> >> Then in 1946, he quit the road and esta >> blished the American Meteorite >> Museum on Route 66 near Meteor Crater, where it went on public >> display. >> >> In 1953, after America abandoned Route 66, Nininger moved his >> collection to Sedona, where it was put on display in the Verde Valley >> for the first time in nearly 800 years. >> >> Today the Camp Verde meteorite rests prominently on a table with two >> dozen other irons, many of which came with the Nininger collection, in >> the center of a room containing hundreds of other meteorites from >> across the world and, ultimately, beyond. >> ______________________________________________ >> http://www.meteoritecentral.com >> Meteorite-list mailing list >> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >> http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list >> >> ______________________________________________ >> http://www.meteoritecentral.com >> Meteorite-list mailing list >> Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com >> http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list >> > > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > -- ......................................................... Michael Gilmer (Louisiana, USA) Member of the Meteoritical Society. Member of the Bayou Region Stargazers Network. Websites - http://www.galactic-stone.com and http://www.glassthrower.com ..........................................................Received on Wed 10 Jun 2009 10:35:23 AM PDT |
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