[meteorite-list]The New Concord Meteorite - Photos

Jim Strope jim at catchafallingstar.com
Tue Mar 29 11:51:37 EST 2005


Mark and list members:

I took a trip to Marietta College to see the Main Mass of the New Concord 
Meteorite a couple of years ago.  Here are photos for your viewing pleasure:

http://209.238.151.128/newconcord.htm

Jim Strope
421 Fourth Street
Glen Dale, WV  26038

My Ebay Auctions: 
http://cgi3.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewUserPage&userid=catchafallingstar.com


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "MARK BOSTICK" <thebigcollector at msn.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Tuesday, March 29, 2005 11:02 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] NPA 10-25-1975 I Remember..The New 
ConcordMeteorite


> Paper: The Advocate
> City: Newark, Ohio
> Date: Saturday, October 25, 1975
> Page: 7
>
> 'I Remember, I Remember'
>
> Minnie Hits Moody
> The New Concord Meteor
>
>     It has amazed me, these past few years, considering the meteoric rise 
> of the fame of John Glenn, of whom Guernsey County may well be proud, that 
> nobody has brought up the subject of the Guernsey County Meteor, 
> frequently mentioned with awe even this far away when I was a child - 
> Guernsey County then considered a remote spot, a full day's journey 
> distant by Ohio Electric and B. & O., counting the wait in Newark and 
> Zanesville to change lines and cars.
>     Grandpa even had a souvenir of the meteor, one of the many stones 
> which it scattered.  It had been given to him some time afterward - he was 
> not on the scene.
>     According to Prof. Elias Loomis of Yale College (as it then was 
> called) writing in Harper's Magazine for June, 1868, this meteor was one 
> of the most remarkable then on record because of the large quantity of 
> stones which fell to the earth.  His article entitled, "Shooting Stars, 
> Detonating Meteors and Aerolites," gives just about all the facts we know 
> now, more than a century later, about this remarkable incident.
>     Henry Howe, author of "Howe's Historical Collections of Ohio," also 
> tells us a few particulars.
>     On the 1st of May 1868, about half an hour after noon, an aerolite 
> exploded over the western border of Guernsey County a little east of the 
> village of New Concord.  As it approached the earth, its brilliance nearly 
> equaled that of the sun.  A great number of distance detonations were 
> heard, like the firing of canon, after which the sounds became blended 
> together and were compared to the roar of a railway train.  Several stones 
> were seen to fall to the ground, and they penetrated the earth from two to 
> three feet.  The largest weighed 103 pounds, and is (date of 1868), 
> preserved in "the cabinet of Marietta College." (Here I quote Yale's 
> Professor Loomis.)
>     Another stone was found which weighed 53 pounds; a third 51 pounds; a 
> fourth between 40 and 50 pounds, and a fifth weighed 36 pounds.  A small 
> one, weighing about 15 pounds is preserved in "the cabinet of Yale 
> College." After 30 stones were found; the entire weight of all the 
> fragments was estimated at 700 pounds.  Grandpa's stone was of trifling 
> size, small enough to be held in the hand of a child.  I looked for it in 
> his desk when I was preparing this column, but it was not in the customary 
> small drawer where he kept it.  Which is hardly surprising.  Grandpa has 
> been dead 66 years.
>     Owing to the cloudy state of the atmosphere near New Concord on May 1, 
> 1860, conditions were unfavorable for accurate observation of the meteor's 
> position in the heavens.  It has been computer, however, that the meteor 
> moved northwest; that its path was almost horizontal and its elevation 
> about 40 miles above the earth's surface.  The velocity of the Weston 
> meteor relative to the earth was about 15 miles per second.  Professor 
> Lommis then adds, as of 1868, that there were 18 well-authenticated cases 
> in which aerolites had fallen during the last 60 years, and their 
> aggregate weight was 1,250 pounds.
>
> (end)
>
> Clear Skies,
> Mark Bostick
> Wichita, Kansas
> http://www.meteoritearticles.com
> http://www.kansasmeteoritesociety.com
> http://www.imca.cc
>
> http://stores.ebay.com/meteoritearticles
>
> PDF copy of this article, and most I post (and about 1/2 of those on my 
> website), are available upon e-mail request.
>
> The NPA in the subject line, stands for Newspaper Article. The old list 
> server allowed us a search feature the current does not, so I guess this 
> is more for quick reference and shortening the subject line now.
>
>
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