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Post Info TOPIC: Kansas Pallasite


L

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Brenham meteorite
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A 1,410-pound meteorite, wrenched two years ago from a wheat field near Greensburg, Kan., is going up for auction next month, with an estimated price thats out of this world.
The so-called Brenham meteorite, prized as the largest of its kind, is one of two centrepiece attractions at a meteorite sale scheduled for Oct. 28 at the Bonhams auction house in New York.

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L

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Greensburg's meteorite
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Five billion years since its formation and 20,000 years after it entered the earth's atmosphere, the 1,000 pound meteorite still is on the move.
Greensburg's meteorite was launched into a new trajectory after an F5 tornado destroyed the town and museum in early May. And after several months of being in storage at Wichita's Exploration Place, it's hit Hays -- for the time being.
The meteorite arrived Tuesday morning at Fort Hays State University's Sternberg Museum of Natural History, where it will be displayed in the front lobby indefinitely.

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L

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RE: Kansas Pallasite
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Before a tornado destroyed Greensburg, Kansas, last month, the southwest Kansas town was known for two things - the world's largest hand-dug well and the half-ton "Space Wanderer" meteorite.
Meteorite hunters and enthusiasts weren't surprised the Wanderer survived. They knew it would take more than a tornado to destroy a 1,000-pound rock that had endured a tortuous journey here from space.
They were more shaken by the news of what the tornado had done to the rest of the town.
Now they've joined the effort to rebuild Greensburg. To raise money for relief efforts they're holding a raffle of - what else? - meteorites.

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L

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Greensburg's famous 1,000-pound space rock landed at Exploration Place on Monday, where it will be on display for about a month.
Dubbed the "Space Wanderer" when it was unearthed in 1949, the pallasite meteorite -- the second largest of many that have been excavated in Kansas -- will spend the next few months wandering the state while Greensburg rebuilds.

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L

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One of Greensburg's most well-known attractions is coming to Wichita, at least for a little while.  The town's meteorite will be put on display at Exploration Place.
The museum says, the 1,000 pound Brenham pallasite meteorite will arrive some time next week.
The big rock was part of Greensburg's Big Well attraction, but it was blown away by the May 4th tornado.  It was found a short time later.

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L

Posts: 131433
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Greensburg
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Half a year ago, Wired ran a story about a guy who'd built a makeshift metal detector to hunt for meteorites under the corn and wheat fields of southwestern Kansas. Steve Arnold wasn't a Kansan, but he took a house in Greensburgheart of Kiowa countyto be near the fields that, thousands of years ago, were the site of the Brenham meteor fall. Greensburg already had, as a roadside attraction, a 1,000-pound specimen of pallasite meteorite, the largest ever found in the US, until Arnold found a bigger rock.
When we did the Wired Science TV show pilot we went to Greensburg to talk to Arnold. We even found another rockours was only about a 50-pounder, on sale now for $12,000. The town was a perfectly nice place. Lots of boarded-up stores on the main drag, just like you find in any town in the middle of the country these days. Lots of open space. Not too many places to get a meal. Trim little houses.
And now Greensburg is basically gone.

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L

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Searchers found two more victims amid the rubble that was once Greensburg, raising the death toll from a powerful tornado that largely obliterated the small Kansas town to at least 10, authorities said Monday.

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L

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The meteorite is not missing
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Within days of a tornado that destroyed 90% of Greensburg, KS, at least 7 people have been arrested for looting the town:
What bugs me more is that the 1,000 pound pallasite meteorite, one of the world's largest, is gone. So is the rest of the town's meteorite collection. That collection wasn't just an important part of the town's tourism industry, right alongside it's hand-dug well (which is presumed to be intact underneath the wreckage). The meteorites were part of what could have been a wonderful experiment in scientific advocacy for the region.

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Finally, there's good news from here.
The town's famous 1,000-pound meteorite is not lost after all. It was just hiding, under the rubble of the museum that had housed it for decades and is no more.

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L

Posts: 131433
Date:
Kansas Pallasite
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Cram Science Hall was the place to be Monday for fans of really hard rock.
Thats where Don Stimpson showed off a pair of 300-pound meteorites to a crowded classroom. And not just any meteorites. These were pallasites, a rare stony-iron mix. How rare? Try less than 1.5 percent of all asteroids.
Despite the rarity, shoplifting was obviously not a concern.

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L

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Steve Arnold, 40, drives across a farm field near Haviland, Kan. (pop. 612), listening intently to the hum from the home-built metal detector pulled behind his all-terrain vehicle. Suddenly, Arnold stops to listen as a whine emanates from the machine. Loud and annoying, the sound is sweet music to the meteorite hunter’s ears.
Something metal is buried beneath the wheat stubble and, if Arnold is lucky, it will be another rock from outer space.

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