[meteorite-list] Stat. Speaking / killer Hammers (Barbotan)
Shawn Alan
photophlow at yahoo.com
Mon Nov 21 07:18:24 EST 2011
Ruben and Listers
In THE FRIEND 1834 publication VOL 7, a religious and literary journal states.....
"In July 1790, another case occurred at Barbotan, a place in the
vicinity of Bordeaux, which is thus described by Lomet, a respectable citizen
who witnessed the phenomenon:— " It was a very bright fire-ball, luminous
as the sun, of the size of an ordinary balloon, and, after inspiring the
inhabitants with consternation, burst, and disappeared. A few days after, some
peasants brought stones, which they said fell from the meteor; but the
philosophers to whom they offered them laughed at their assertions as fabulous.
The peasants would have now more reasons to laugh at the philosophers." So
they would, Mons. Lomet. One of these stones, fifteen inches in diameter, broke
through the roof of a cottage, and killed a herdsman and a bullock. After
reading the above statement, we cannot refrain from wondering at the slow
belief of philosophers as to the heavenly origin of these stones. Where was the
body to come from, a body of the dimensions described, which was capable of
breaking through tho roof of a cottage, and committing such deadly havoc, if it
did not come from the atmosphere, ay, and from an immense height too ?"
http://books.google.com/books?id=y4_TAAAAMAAJ&dq=Barbotan%20meteorite%201790&pg=PA409#v=onepage&q&f=false
I have seen later publication dates that refute the claims, but it think this is the earliest reference I have found on the case of Barbotan meteorite fall and killing a man. I bet there might be earlier references and I wonder if other Listers might have more info on the fall?
***
I did a search in Google Books and found the same article that was published in 1834 in THE FRIENDS was also published in Chamber's Journal in 1833.
http://books.google.com/books?id=XWAiAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA346&dq=Barbotan+meteorite+1833&hl=en&ei=GinKToydO8Ph0QGQh9wU&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10&ved=0CF4Q6AEwCQ#v=onepage&q&f=false
And in 1832 in The Christian's Penny magazine makes reference to the Barbotan meteorite where a man was killed by a falling stone.
http://books.google.com/books?id=xCcFAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA101&dq=Barbotan+meteorite+1832&hl=en&ei=PyrKTv-HKobl0QGSod0r&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=3&ved=0CDoQ6AEwAg#v=onepage&q&f=false
Found a reference in 1826 from Dictionnaire classique d'histoire naturelle, 10 - Page 489 states........
French
On peut citer pour preuve , l'histoire des pierres qui tombèrent, en 1790, à Juillac et à Barbotan en Gascogne, et qui furent envoyées à Condorcet, ainsi que la pierre qui iàillit tuer plusieurs personnes, le la mars 1798, à Salles près Villefranche, département du Rhône. Celle-ci fut examinée par le minéralogiste De Drée qui donna une relation de sa chute.
English
It is just j nevertheless, that several French naturalists and physicists, despite the views of leuis * colleagues, had believed firmly in Aéiolithes. These include evidence for the history of the stones that fell in 1790 to Juillac and Barbotan in Gascony, and were sent to Condorcet, and the stone iàillit kill many people, the
March 1798, near Villefranche to Salles, Department of the Rhone. This was considered by the mineralogist Drée who gave a relation of his fall.
The earliest reference I found about the Barbotan stone killing a man was in The Manchester Iris in 1822. Which states as follows...
"From the concurrent testimony of those who have described these phenonifba, wc
learn that in every instance, they are preceded by a luminous appearance, globes
of fire, or igneous meteors, which generally break with a noise resembling
thunder, and then fall to the ground in masses of different sir.es. The weight
varies from a few onn.es to several hundred weight. At Verona, two stones fell
in IOCS, of which one weighed 200lbs. and the other 3001bs. When the masses have
fallen, they are almost always warm, and penetrate the earth to some depth: at Barb, near Bourdeaux, a mass of fifteen inches
diameter penetrated a hut and killed a herdsman and a bullock, on July 2-1th,
1790."
http://books.google.com/books?pg=PA330&dq=Barbotan%20meteorite%201822&ei=jjDKTrbAB8Lr0gGNudXyDw&ct=result&id=PDIFAAAAQAAJ&output=text
A little history for you :)
Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633
eBay story
http://www.ebay.com/sch/ph0t0phl0w/m.html
[meteorite-list] Stat. Speaking / killer Hammers
Ruben Garcia mrmeteorite
at gmail.com
Sun Nov 20 11:37:02 EST 2011
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________________________________
A nice list member just sent me this text in an email. I've
never
heard this...is it true?
BARBOTAN
07.24.1790 (france)
killed a man!
(the man was a farmer)
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