[meteorite-list] Plymouth Meteorite
From: Regine P. <fips_bruno_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Mar 2012 08:08:29 +0000 (GMT) Message-ID: <1331107709.15307.YahooMailClassic_at_web132106.mail.ird.yahoo.com> Interesting. I was actually referring to Keyser's son - here is small clipping I uploaded from a Scientific American clipping of 1895: http://spiralmemoprintsales.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_06.html --- Phil Whitmer <prairiecactus at rtcol.com> schrieb am Mi, 7.3.2012: > Von: Phil Whitmer <prairiecactus at rtcol.com> > Betreff: [meteorite-list] Plymouth Meteorite > An: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > Datum: Mittwoch, 7. M?rz, 2012 07:15 Uhr > Regine: > > I remembered the story incorrectly. > > J.J. Keyser's age was not given when he found the Plymouth > meteorite. According to Buchwald, he probably plowed it up > in 1883. Ward gives the probably incorrect date of discovery > as 1893 in his later catalogues. The story I heard was that > Keyser gave or traded the meteorite (estimated by Buchwald > at 13 to 15 kg as the actual weight was never recorded by > Ward) to the Plymouth Oliver plow dealer where it sat on a > desk on display in an office. > > Somehow Ward caught wind of an iron meteorite in Plymouth. I > think maybe a relative of the plow dealer contacted him, I > forget the details. Ward later cut up and sold the > meteorite. I got to handle the Field Museum's Plymouth > meteorite when Dr. Ed Olsen pulled it out of a drawer > amongst about a hundred pounds of Murchison. There were > piles of slices everywhere. My uncle and I talked > extensively to Dr. Olsen about the meteorite. He shared > several insights. > > Mr. Keyser told Ward about a larger meteorite in the same > field, discovered in 1872. It was so big he was getting > tired of plowing around it with his team of horses, so he > and his son completely buried it, probably three or four > feet deep, beneath the reach of the mold-board plow. (I'm > assuming it was an Oliver plow, made in South Bend, Indiana) > In 1894 Ward searched the field with a compass but found > nothing. You would think he would have used a probe in areas > where Keyser remembered burying the larger mass. > > The field has been extensively searched by many people using > a variety of equipment. All searches have turned up nothing > but bolts, bits of wire, nails, and other such stuff. > > > Phil Whitmer > > > ------------------- > It sounded so strange to me. But I do not know Nowak so I > thought I'd ask before dismissing it. The original account > of the guy living on the farm does on the other hand not > sound completely absurd to me - he was not an old man when > reporting to Ward in 1895. They went searching together. > > Regine > > ______________________________________________ > > Visit the Archives at http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html > Meteorite-list mailing list > Meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com > http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list > Received on Wed 07 Mar 2012 03:08:29 AM PST |
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