[meteorite-list] Nininger & The Vatican
From: michael cottingham <mikewren_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 15 Nov 2009 16:30:13 -0700 Message-ID: <A97FE69B-53B0-4796-9B92-D28EE56DCD1F_at_gilanet.com> Who's Nininger? On Nov 15, 2009, at 3:52 PM, Meteorites USA wrote: > An eye on the sky, one on the ground > By Christopher Cokinos > Posted: 11/15/2009 01:00:00 AM MST > http://www.denverpost.com/opinion/ci_13776988 > > Meteorite expert Harvey Nininger. (Courtesy of the American > Meteorite Laboratory Photo Collection, Collections Research for > Museums, Denver ) > > The International Year of Astronomy is drawing to a close, and it's > been marked by some notable passages. We've celebrated the 400th > anniversary of Galileo's first view through a telescope, and we've > looked back 40 years to the first Apollo moon landing. > > This month, another anniversary has taken place, but one quite > obscure except to some dealers, collectors and researchers of > meteorites. Eighty-six years ago, on Nov. 9, 1923, a then-unknown, > middle-aged science professor named Harvey Nininger was walking home > from work in McPherson, Kan. Suddenly, he saw a huge meteor so vivid > that eyewitnesses would remember the event for years to come. > > The fireball would also change the course of Harvey's life and the > course of science. Nininger anticipated an insight about life and > death on our planet decades before it became widely accepted by > researchers and then became the stuff of Hollywood blockbusters. > > When the meteor vanished from his view on that chilly evening, > Nininger marked the sidewalk where he stood. He knew that if he > received enough reports from eyewitnesses, he could triangulate > their accounts and have a rough sense of where meteorites might have > fallen. (Meteors are the passage of burning objects from space into > our atmosphere; meteorites are the heavy, usually dark rocks that > sometimes fall from them to Earth.) > > Nininger's idea was a radical one. No one had attempted to search > for meteorites where none had been seen to fall, and a leading > geologist once told Nininger that if he spent the rest of his life > looking for meteorites he might find one. The geologist was wrong. > > Though Nininger didn't find any space rocks from that Nov. 9 > fireball, in the years ahead he'd find hundreds from other falls. > Nininger believed that more meteorites could be discovered from > unwitnessed or forgotten falls by simply scouring the countryside. > He was proven right on that count as well. > > After quitting his $3,000-a-year teaching job at McPherson College > (during the Great Depression!), Nininger moved his family to Denver, > where in 1930 he became a part-time curator of meteorites at the > Colorado Museum of Natural History. The museum paid him just $600 a > year, so Nininger had to rely on his obsession and his wits to make > a living at buying, selling, finding, displaying, popularizing and > researching meteorites. No one had done anything like it before in > the study of space rocks, which was then a backwater of geology. > > With help from Denver truck magnate Dean Gillespie, Nininger criss- > crossed the continent, from Saskatoon to Chihuahua City, discovering > newly fallen meteorites and ones that had languished in ditches, > corn fields, even attics. He proved that iron meteorites were not > the most common ones to fall, but that they were "selected" for > discovery because they look so alien and weigh so much. He recovered > 1,200 pounds of a rare stony-iron meteorite from a Kansas field. > > When most people still thought craters on the moon had been formed > by volcanoes, Nininger and a few others begged to differ, suggesting > they must have formed by the impacts of meteorites. He was right > once more. And 40 years before scientists would link the extinction > of the dinosaurs to an asteroid's collision with the planet, > Nininger suggested that cosmic impacts could lead to global mass > extinctions. > > A tireless worker, Nininger did find time during his Denver years to > be active with the Boy Scouts and take his children to concerts. > They watched the colored lights of the fountain at City Park, > recalls Nininger's daughter, Doris Banks. Winter car trips meant > that Harvey would warm up iron meteorites at home, then wrap them in > blankets to place on the floorboard, thus keeping everyone toasty. > > I suppose not many Denverites today remember the name Harvey > Nininger, but until World War II he was one of the city's most > prominent scientific citizens. He was also known nationally from > profiles in publications like The Saturday Evening Post. > > Eventually, he moved his family to Arizona, where he opened the > world's only museum of meteorites and where his pursuits continued, > at times, to get him in hot water. For example, Nininger didn't have > a Ph.D., but he when he was awarded an honorary doctorate he began > calling himself "Dr. Nininger," at least on his letterhead. > > His love of meteorites became a family affair. His son-in-law, Glenn > Huss, took over Nininger's "American Meteorite Laboratory" in Denver > for many years. Glenn's son, Gary, has become one of the world's > best-known researchers of meteorites and the solar system. > > Tonight, go outside and watch the sky for a meteor. Look for the > Leonid meteor shower when it peaks on Tuesday night and Wednesday > morning. And remember that a few rare souls don't just make a wish > when they see a meteor. Instead, they work hard to make that wish > real. So it was with Harvey Nininger, Denver's original "meteorite > man." > > Christopher Cokinos is a professor at Utah State University and > author of "The Fallen Sky: An Intimate History of Shooting > Stars" (Tarcher/Penguin July 2009). > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > > Vatican's eye on the heavens > By ERIC BERGER > HOUSTON CHRONICLE > Nov. 14, 2009, 9:58PM > http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/metropolitan/6721242.html > > Brother Guy Consolmagno is curator of the meteorite collection at > Vatican City. > > Brother Guy Consolmagno, the curator of meteorites at the Vatican > Observatory, will give a free public lecture at 7:30 p.m. Thursday > at the Lunar and Planetary Institute, 3600 Bay Area Blvd. in the > Clear Lake area. Before coming to Houston, he spoke with science > writer Eric Berger about what the pope's astronomers do, about > Galileo and about the fate of Pluto. > > Q: What does a Vatican astronomer do? > > A: There are 15 Jesuits and one diocesan priest involved at the > Vatican Observatory, and basically 12 of us are astronomers and the > others help out with administration. We do astronomy. When I was > hired I was told one thing: Do good science. We each have our own > programs, ranging from cosmology and string theory all the way to > planetary science and meteor dust. We all do regular science, > collaborating with other scientists around the world. Our group > comes from four different continents and probably speaks a dozen > languages. For my own particular work I do planetary science, so I'm > the curator of the meteorite collection, and I do a lot of physical > studies of meteorites, their density, porosity, thermal properties. > And the goal of doing these measurements is to be able to understand > the conditions under which these rocks were formed 4.5 billion years > ago in the early solar system, and also to give us an idea about the > materials that made the planets. > > Q: I take it the church no longer persecutes its astronomers. > > A: Certainly the Catholic Church did wrong by Galileo, everybody > admits that. The history of what exactly happened is a lot more > confusing than the mythology. I don't claim to know the truth more > than anyone else. The odd thing is, what happened to Galileo is sort > of contrary to the whole tradition of the church supporting science, > and even supporting Galileo most of his life. It had to be a rude > shock to him because up until about 1630, he was in his late 60s > then, he had had nothing but support from the majority of the > church. The pope was his friend. Then suddenly he was brought to > trial for a book that had been published with church approval. After > the trial he was allowed to stay with his friend, the cardinal of > Sienna, and eventually go home. Those years during the trial were > just a very odd, odd anomaly. The best theory I've heard is that it > had to do with the fact that the Thirty Years War was going on, and > it was all tied up in local politics. But that doesn't make anywhere > near as cute a story as the church being anti-science. > > Q: Some 400 years later there's still a lot of tension between > science and religion in the United States. > > A: I think that comes from scientists who are not really comfortable > with religion because they don't know it very well; the religion > they know is what they learned when they were 12 years old. And many > religious people are not comfortable with science because they don't > know science very well. Face it, most people stopped learning > science and religion when they were about 12 years old, so they have > a very childish understanding of both: Religion is a big book of > rules and science is a big book of facts. Fortunately, neither is > true. > > Q: Why should science and faith co-exist? > > A: The fact is, they do. The hardest thing I've had in my job of > talking about this is trying to figure out why anyone would think > they couldn't. It's a funny thing. I was a scientist for 15 years > before I entered the Jesuits, and most of my friends in the science > world had no idea about my religious life, any more than I knew > theirs, because it's private. But when I became a Jesuit I was > surprised at how many of them came up to me and said, ?Oh, that's > wonderful. Let me tell you about the church I go to.? > > Q: Does the pope think Pluto should be a planet? > > A: The Catholic Church does not take official positions on matters > of science. We learned that lesson from Galileo, thank you. > > Q: Well, what do you think? Should Pluto be a planet? (In 2006 > astronomers declared it no longer should be considered a planet.) > > A: I was actually deeply involved in that whole discussion ? as was > Chris Corbally from our group, who helped write the final definition > ? because the Vatican Observatory is a member of the International > Astronomical Union. In retrospect, although it wasn't the way I > voted at the time, now that I've lived with it for three years I > think they made the right choice. > > ----------------------------------------------------------- > > Enjoy... > > Regards, > Eric Wichman > Meteorites USA > ______________________________________________ > http://www.meteoritecentral.com > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list Received on Sun 15 Nov 2009 06:30:13 PM PST |
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