| | Journal (article/letter/editorial) | appearance the question has been raised as A N e w Meteorite f r o m Algonza, Kewaunee to whether they belong...meteor and the structure and compoThe Algoma meteorite, which was plotvsition of the meteorites should...course of the meteor ~vonldhave been from true meteorite. It is almost unique among southeast to northwest...of the T h e Mohokea Caldera on Hawaii: C. H. meteorite. I t seems clear that these groovI~IT~HGOGE. ings...I t is of larger dimensions tha,n the Algoma meteorite, must have moved celebrated calderas of Mauna | | | Journal (article/letter/editorial) | fall. The element nickel associated with meteoritic iron was first noted in 1799. Manganese was discovered...occurred one year before the characterization of nickel-iron meteorites by the etched Wtdmanstatten figures was...discovered. To this can be added 34 meteorites from Mexico and eight from Canada. Among the meteoritic fmds...respectively 36,3, and 0.9 tons. Three great meteorite showers in Iowa added thousands of new meteoritic...in meteorites. J. Lawrence Smith began his own meteorite collection with the purchase of the collection | | | Book | System by Franklyn M. Branley Illustrated THOMAS Y. by Helmut K.Wimmer CROWELL COMPANY NEW YORK ...livingroom sofa when all of a sudden a 10-pound meteorite ( a meteortwo satellites of these planets are...a person in the United States being hit by a meteorite. There have been collisions in other parts of...1794 Italy; killed birds, friar. a small meteorite fragment pierced a child's harm hat without...1870 India; a killed. man was stunned when a meteorite just missed hitting him. 1911 Egypt; a dog | | | Report (volume) | Geographical Society: Bulletin, vol. 36, 1904. New York, N. Y. American Geologist, vols. 33 and 34, 1904. Minneapolis...and advance papers of 1904 meetings. New York, N. Y. American Journal of Science: 4th ser., vols. 17 and...vol. 20, 1904; Journal, vol. 4, 1904. New York, N. Y. American Naturalist, vol. 38, 1904. Boston, Mass...American Paleontology: Bulletin no. 19, 1904. Ithaca, N. Y. American Philosophical Society: Proceedings, vol...Contributions, vol. 12, nos. 99-101, 1904. New York, N. Y. Congres Geologique International, Compte rendu de | | | Report (volume) | Geographical Society: Bulletin, vols. 32-37. New York, N. Y. American Geologist: vols. 27-36. Minneapolis, Minn...Bimonthly Bulletin, nos. 1-6, 1905. New York, N. Y. American Journal of Science: 4th ser., vols. 11-20...3-5; Memoirs; vol. 1, pts. 7 and 8. New York, N. Y. American Naturalist: vols. 35-39! Boston, Mass. American...American Paleontology: Bulletin,'nos. 14-19. Ithaca, N. Y. American Philosophical Society: Proceedings, vols...Sciences: vol. 7, no. 1; vol. 8, nos. 1-3. Buffalo, N. Y. California Academy of Sciences: Proceedings, 3d. | | | Book | belt's outer regions, the around a core of nickel-iron alloy. Silver-colored M-types—metallic chunks of...thus preserved much of their original chemical and iron that emerged from repeated collisions among makeup... reddish S-types, which may con¬ tain traces of iron in addition to their predominant silicates, are...mission might even pay for itself: A solid nickel-iron asteroid half a mile in diameter, mineralogists...known as differentiation. Heavy minerals such as iron sank to the asteroid’s center and formed a dense | | | Book | obtain a panorama of the scope and substance of meteorite research. I endeavored to remedy this situation...not exhaustively discussed—the great upsurge in meteorite research along many new lines in recent years...and conservation of meteoritic material. Every meteorite is to some degree unique; and meteorites, unlike...I not been favored bv the curatorship of the meteorite collection of The American Museum of Natural History...Chicago Natural History Museum, the Nininger Meteorite Collection (Arizona State University, Tempe), | | | Book (edition) | BASE METALS 123 II III VII VIII IX X XI XII IRON AND FERROALLOY METALS 150 RARE AND UNUSUAL METALS...Age into the Age of Iron. In a very real sense we still live in the Age of Iron, or more truthfully,... siderite) was made from for iron because the mineral contains iron; haematites the (now made from...and "to wash" because it removes the color due to iron impurities in molten glass. Muscovite, the white... MINERALS 8 AND CRYSTALS composition, both being iron sulfide, FeS 2 but they occur in different , and |
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