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Post Info TOPIC: L’Aigle meteorite


L

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RE: L’Aigle meteorite
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On the 6th day of the month of Floreal of the year 11 of the French Republic, that is April 26th, 1803 according to the Gregorian calendar, around 01:00 pm, a meteorite exploded in the atmosphere above the city of L'Aigle, in Lower Normandy, and scattered some 3,000 pieces of stone over the countryside. Men and beasts got away with a memorable scare, but nobody and nothing came to serious harm. 
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Title: The meteorite fall at L'Aigle and the Biot report: exploring the cradle of meteoritics (2006).
Authors: Matthieu Gounelle

Stones fell around L'Aigle, July 26th 1803'. Thus ends the results section of the Biot report read in front of the Institut de France, the 29 Messidor an 11 (17 July 1803) after his 9 days trip to L'Aigle, 140 km NW of Paris. At the time of the L'Aigle fall, the mere existence of meteorites was harshly debated. Chladni's book on iron masses had been published in 1794, but his ideas had not yet convinced the savants or the educated laymen of the time. Meteorite falls were anomalous events in the order of things. In this paper, I argue that Biot's report on the visit he made to L'Aigle is a key event in establishing the extraterrestrial origin of meteorites. Biot was able to build the proof outside the laboratory and the library, solving the central problem of the distrust granted to the eyewitnesses of the falls, usually peasants. The reason why Biot was sent to L'Aigle by the Minister of Interior Chaptal was the establishment, in the early 19th century, of a centralized politico-administrative structure whose aim was to know, classify and organize France. While Chaptal was trying to bring every social and economic reality into a new social order, Biot brought back the L'Aigle meteorites, and thereby all meteorites, within the order of things.

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L

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L'Aigle meteorite
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The L'Aigle (H4) meteorite fell in Basse-Normandie, France, on the 26th April, 1803.
A total mass of 37 kg was recovered.

48° 46'N, 0° 38'E



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A meteorite shower of more than 3,000 fragments fell on the town of L'Aigle in France in the early afternoon of 26 April 1803. It was this meteorite shower that finally confirmed to men of science that stones really did fall from the sky. Ferguson obtained a piece from the main body of the meteorite that sold at Christies in 1998 for £30,000.
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L

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L’Aigle meteorite
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L'Aigle is a L6 meteorite  fallen in 1803  in Basse-Normandie, France.
In the early afternoon of 26 April 1803 a meteorite  shower of more than 3000 fragments fell upon the town of L'Aigle in Normandy  (France). Upon hearing of this event the French Academy of Sciences sent the young scientist Jean-Baptiste Biot, to investigate that spectacular fall of stones. After painstaking work in the field he reported two kinds of evidence pointing to an extraterrestrial origin for the stones

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Latitude: 48°46'N, Longitude: 0°38'E

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