[meteorite-list] Tornado snatches 1, 000 pound pallasite meteorite

Sterling K. Webb sterling_k_webb at sbcglobal.net
Sun May 6 17:45:03 EDT 2007


Hi, All,

    Maria Haas's original post on relief efforts had
a message from Steve Arnold appended to it that
hasn't appeared separately on the List.

    In it, he says:
    "On a side note, if you go here:
http://www.kansas.com/static/slides/050507tornadoaerials/
In photo #12, is the picture of the twisted water tower,
and the Big Well building that housed the 1,000 pound
meteorite.  You can see what I think is the oak stand
(about 2 feet high and 3 feet wide, possibly tipped
over) that the 1,000 pound meteorite had sat on (in
the center of the frame, about 1/6 of the way up
from the bottom).  If I am not mistaken, I think
the meteorite is the brown object on the floor just
to the right of the stand."

    I can't of anybody more qualified to recognize
a big Brenham, so maybe it hasn't gone very far.


Sterling K. Webb
---------------------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Darren Garrison" <cynapse at charter.net>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Sunday, May 06, 2007 4:40 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Tornado snatches 1,000 pound pallasite 
meteorite


On Sun, 6 May 2007 13:49:07 -0500, you wrote:

>I agree with Charlie.  I don't think it would be moved much, if any.
>I think a wind greater than the terminal velocity of the object in
>free fall would be needed to lift it, and that would be several
>hundred miles per hour.  If it is truly missing, I would be willing
>to bet on  theft.

I wouldn't expect theft-- yet.  A chaotic situation known about only minutes 
in
advance, destroying the entire town, and a theft needing heavy lifting 
equipment
and transportation (even if only a engine-block lifter and a big pickup) 
doesn't
seem too likely.  I'd bet it is still in the pile of debris that was the
building containing it.  Unless that building is what is now on top of the 
well,
in which case it could be at the bottom of the well.  What is more of a 
concern
(from a meteorite perspective, not to belittle all the other human an 
material
loss) is the other meteorite collection of the town that is mentioned--  
which
would be much more easily lost and much harder to find.

Speaking of, anyone have photos of the other meteorite collection, as 
mentioned
in the articles?
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