[meteorite-list] Temperature of meteorites (Bernd's List)

From: Mike Bandli <fuzzfoot_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 23 Nov 2010 08:41:01 -0800
Message-ID: <9A93CBE9ADA44990AD0D73848B4574BD_at_Bandli1>

I have a couple to add to Bernd's list. Both were picked up immediately
after the fall:

23) Lixna: Two other workers who were harrowing a nearby field near the
village of Lasdany saw another object covered in earth, which had impacted
the ground only 20 steps away. One of the men touched the stone and burned
his hand. The burn was later confirmed in a letter by the Count Plater
Sieber as he described it as a reddened swollen area on the man's finger...

24) Sena: The fall at Sena took place around noon on November 17, 1773... a
man named Miguel Calvo discovered a mysterious stone on the property of his
neighbor, Francisco Gonzalez. He first moved it with his hoe and then by
hand, but withdrew immediately because the stone was "very hot..."

Sena also occurred long before the acceptance of meteorites and the eruption
of Mt. Vesuvius, so there was no reason to be predisposed to any "hot rock"
ideas.

Fried ice cream,

Mike

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Historic Meteorites
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-----Original Message-----
From: meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com] On Behalf Of
bernd.pauli at paulinet.de
Sent: Tuesday, November 23, 2010 1:06 AM
To: Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Subject: [meteorite-list] Temperature of meteorites

Good morning Listees, Listoids, Listers,

Here's a copy of something I posted many years ago (maybe 2004).

Cheers,

Bernd

-----------------------------------------------------------


Meteorites - warm or hot to the touch?

01) The Binningup meteorite was recovered within a few minutes
of the fall and was reported to have been warm to the touch.

02) Cabin Creek: Three hours after the fall, Mr. and Mrs. Shandy were able
to find the hole and excavate the mass, reportedly still uncomfortably warm.

03) Glatton: was warm, not hot, when first picked up.

04) Gurram Konda: near the tent some small warm
stones, which the Sentry has seen falling down.

05) Juromenha: The mass was said to have been incandescent
when discovered and still warm when recovered next morning

06) L'Aigle: Affrighted persons who picked them up found
the stones to be very warm and smelling of sulfur.

07) Limerick: It was immediately dug up, and I have been informed by those
that were
present, and on whom I could rely, that it was then warm and had a
sulphurous smell.

08) Middlesbrough: The stone was "new-milk warm" when found, ...

09) Noblesville: The meteorite was not glowing as it passed the boys and
was "slightly warm" when Spaulding picked it up a few seconds after it fell.

10) Pettiswood: The affrighted horse fell to the Earth, and two boys rushed
to him in
terror carrying fragments that Bingley found to be warm as milk just from
the cow.

11) Pontlyfni: When I picked up the fragment of metal, or whatever it is, it
was warm in my hand.

12) Rowton: It is, moreover, stated that when Mr. Brooks found the mass "it
was quite warm."

13) Tsukuba: Seconds later student Ryutaro Araki stopped to retrieve
a still-warm stone that had fallen in front of his car near Tsukuba

14) Wold Cottage: Rushing to the spot he found a large
stone, warm and smoking and smelling of sulfur.

15) Crumlin: When dug out the object, which had embedded itself in a
straightdownward
course for 13 inches, was found to be quite hot, continuing so for about an
hour.

16) Eichst?dt: The man rushed to the spot but found the black
stone too hot to pick up until it cooled in the snow.

17) Hanau: A hot stone the size of a pea was picked up, weight 0.37 gr.

18) Harrogate: A hot stone, like basalt, fell accompanied
by whistling in the air and lightning and thunder ...

19) Holbrook: One piece larger than an orange fell into a tree in a yard
at Aztec cutting the limb off slick and clean and falling to the ground,
and when picked up was almost red-hot.

Von Achen, who saw them fall, reported that they were too hot to pick
up. Two accounts state that they became lighter in color after cooling.

20) Luc?: several harvesters, startled by sudden thunderclaps and a loud
hissing noise, looked up and saw the stone plunge into a field where they
found it half-buried and too hot to pick up.

21) Magombedze: A 10-cm stone weighing approximately 600 gr
survived the impact intact and was hot to touch.

22) Menziswyl: The farmers say that the stone fell with the lightning and
shattered when it hit the ground; it was hot when they picked it up.

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Received on Tue 23 Nov 2010 11:41:01 AM PST


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