[meteorite-list] POP QUIZ answer
From: Shawn Alan <photophlow_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Sun, 15 May 2011 11:48:32 -0700 (PDT) Message-ID: <222890.22206.qm_at_web35408.mail.mud.yahoo.com> Hello Listers ? I would like to say thank you for all of you that sent me in your answers this week for the POP QUIZ. I would like to annouce the 10th Lister that sent in the correct answer and that person is Matthew S, he won a? free 65mg Pena Blanca Spring meteorite from Michael I. Casper collection....? Way to go Matthew :) ? Question: ? The Meson de Fierro is associated with what meteorite. ? Answer: ? Campo del Cielo History ? Chladni reasoned that the huge mass of iron that lay in the flat, powdery soils of the northern Argentine Chaco also must have fallen from the sky. Well known to the nomadic peoples of the region, the mass was first seen by Europeans in 1576 when Capit?n Hern?n Mex?a de Miraval led a small contingent of Spanish soldiers out of the fortified settlement of Santiago del Estero on a long, dangerous march to the site where their guides said they obtained the metal in their weapons. He reported finding a large mass of iron rising out of the ground like a great monument, with smaller pieces lying around it. The Indians said the iron had fallen from the sky amid raging fires, but de Miraval assumed he had found the surface exposure of an iron mine. He carried samples back to Santiago where a blacksmith found it to be iron of exceptionally high purity. ? Despite the fact that he had found native metal instead of iron ore, the Spanish authorities had no interest in developing an iron mine at that time and place. So de Miraval?s official records of his discovery were deposited in the Archivo General de lndias in Seville, where they would lie unread until the early 1920s (Alvarez 1926). Today, they rank as the earliest documentation of the finding and sampling of a meteorite by Europeans in the Americas. ? Two-hundred years passed before don Bartolom? Francisco de Maguna, entered the Chaco in 1774 and came upon what he described as a large, nearly smooth bar or plate of metal, sloping upward out of the ground. This one soon became known as ?el Mes?n de Fierro? (the table of iron). Great excitement ensued when news came from Madrid that the metal assayed 80% iron and 20% silver! It seemed that the Argentine Chacos might be richer than the Andes of Peru! However, analyses made in Buenos Aires and at the historic mining locality of Uspallata in the Andes, yielded no silver at all. One more expedition led by don Francisco de Ibarra in 1779 returned with samples lacking silver. Nevertheless, in 1783 the Viceroy at Buenos Aires sent Lieutenant don Miguel Rub?n de Celis, of the Royal Spanish Navy, to measure the extent of the ore body and, if it proved promising, to found a colony at the site. De Celis led 200 been created by natural modes of combustion. Forest fires or bolts of lightning would be entirely inadequate to melt and reduce bedrock to metallic iron under any circumstances. And the Pallas iron was by far too heavy and in too remote a location to have been created by ancient smelting operations, which, in any case, should have separated out the yellow mineral and robbed the metal of its malleability. Chladni (1794:40) called the yellow component ?olivine? before he ever saw a sample of the Pallas iron. The fusion of the metal, Chladni said, must have taken place in a fire more intense than any known on Earth?a fire that, somehow, left it malleable. Chladni concluded that this ?native iron? was cosmic matter that had heated to incandescence and melted while plunging through the atmosphere in a fireball. Source: Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756?1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research By Ursula B. MARVIN pg19 ? Thank you and till next time ? Shawn Alan IMCA 1633 eBaystore http://shop.ebay.com/photophlow/m.html [meteorite-list] POP QUIZ FRIDAYS Shawn Alan photophlow at yahoo.com Fri May 13 17:27:18 EDT 2011 Previous message: [meteorite-list] test 2 Next message: [meteorite-list] Currency used at Ensisheim.. Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] Hello Listers ? This week has been very interesting on the List I hope this adds to it in a good way for all you meteorite collectors that cant get enough meteorites. ? The name of the game, be the 10th Listerite to email me off the List with the correct answer and you will win a free 65mg Pena Blanca Spring meteorite from Michael I. Casper collection. ? Question ? The Meson de Fierro is associated with what meteorite. ? Good luck :) ? Shawn Alan IMCA 1633 eBaystore http://shop.ebay.com/photophlow/m.html ? ? Previous message: [meteorite-list] test 2 Next message: [meteorite-list] Currency used at Ensisheim.. Messages sorted by: [ date ] [ thread ] [ subject ] [ author ] More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list Received on Sun 15 May 2011 02:48:32 PM PDT |
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