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Post Info TOPIC: Kansas Pallasite


L

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Haviland
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Haviland, Kansas is going to celebrate "Meteorite Day" on July 8th, 2006. A parade in the meteorite's honour starts at 10 am.
Events are then scheduled from 11am to 5pm.

Steve Arnold and family will be there with the Brenham main mass.
Don Stimpson (msp), owner of the Meteorite Farm, will be there and will have some of his collection on display.
There will be a balloon lift for children and food vendors have been invited.
It is Haviland's desire to have a meteorite museum and this might be the first step in that direction.

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L

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RE: Kansas Pallasite
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Recovery of a new 100lb Brenham palasite on April 20th, 2006 in Haviland, Kansas by Steve Arnold.

Photo story

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L

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Brenham meteorite
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Near Haviland, residents try to make Haviland the Meteorite Capital

A new kind of harvest is going on in Kiowa County.
With meteorites selling for $20 a gram -- a 20-pounder can draw up to $20,000 -- farmers are reaping meteorites by the acre.
Don and Sheila Stimpson are among them. But they say they don't care about profit so much as the land's scientific and historical value.
On Saturday, the Stimpsons dug up three meteorites from a field of prairie grass.
They will save the meteorites in hopes of opening a meteorite museum and establishing Haviland as the Meteorite Capital of America.

"I have been trying to generate interest in the scientific community to re-excavate the meteorite crater of Haviland" - Don Stimpson.

The meteorites of Kiowa County are known throughout the world for their gemlike olivine crystals, which look like stained glass when cut.
The Brenham meteorites, named for Brenham Township near Haviland, fell some 20,000 years ago.

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L

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Brenham crater
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Brenham crater also called the Haviland Crater is a small and shallow depression on farmland near Haviland, Kansas, US The depression is about 15 metres in diameter, and oval in shape.
The age is less than 1000 years old., placing it in the Holocene. To date 1.5+ tons of material have been found.


Dr. Clyde Fisher, of the American Museum of Natural History and his assistant inspecting the crater (in the 1930s ?)

Haviland, Kansas, U.S.A. N 37° 36' W 99° 12'

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L

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RE: Kansas Pallasite
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Haviland
37° 37.06' N 99° 06.13' W


Kansas Pallasite
source

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L

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A rare 1,400-pound meteorite was discovered seven feet underground by a collector in an area long known for producing prized space rocks.
Using a metal detector mounted on a three-wheel vehicle, Steve Arnold of Kingston, Arkansas, found the huge stony-iron pallasite two weeks ago on a farm near Haviland, in Kiowa County's Brenham Township in southern Kansas.

The meteorite is classified as an oriented pallasite, a type noted for a conical shape with olivine crystals embedded in iron-nickel alloy. Only two larger ones of that type are known to have been found: a 3,100-pounder in Australia and a 1,500-pounder in Argentina.


Credit Geoffrey Noykin.
Steve Arnold, right, found a meterorite on the far of Allen Binford, left, near Haviland.

"It's a gorgeous museum quality specimen” - Steve Arnold .

The Kansas rock was found in the same area that in 1949 produced a 1,000-pound meteorite now on display at the Celestial Museum in Greensburg.
Meteorites change shape as they enter the Earth's atmosphere. An oriented meteorite, which is rare, maintains a stable flight rather than tumbling.

"It is aesthetically the type of meteorite that makes collectors drool...It's what a meteorite ought to look like. It's going to make first-graders go 'Wow!' " - Steve Arnold

Arnold, who has hunted for meteorites around the world estimates his find is worth "seven figures." Arnold said he wants to sell it, preferably to a museum or someone who will keep it intact.
According to the American Museum of Natural History in New York, the so-called Brenham meteorite exploded centuries ago over what is now Kansas, scattering more than three tons of fragments.
Richard Stephenson, manager of the Big Well in Greensburg, said the majority of meteorites found in Kiowa County come from a two-square-mile area in Brenham Township.
The meteorites of Kiowa County are known throughout the world for their gemlike olivine crystals, which look almost like stained glass when cut.

"We get regular reports of meteorites. People see them, and they bring them in. A normal size is anywhere from the size of your fist to a grapefruit"- Rex Buchanan, associate director of the Kansas Geological Survey.

Prehistoric Indians used the rust-coloured stones to fashion into sacred objects, earrings, knives, chisels and even buttons and beads.
In the 1920s and 1930s, one of the world's foremost meteorite hunters, Harvey H. Nininger, examined a large depression that locals thought was a buffalo wallow. It turned out to be an impact crater.

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-- Edited by Blobrana at 15:12, 2005-11-12

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