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IV.—Supplement to a Chapter in the History of Meteorites

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

In this paper is given an engraving, actual size, and a short account of a small metallic mass, weighing rather more than two pounds, and found at the above date in Davison county. When found it was covered with a thick scaly crust of oxide. It weighs 1·24 kilogrammes or 23 3/4 ounces avoirdupois. It is one of the rare class that do not show the Widmanstättian figures. It contains iron, nickel, cobalt, and phosphorus. A complete analysis of the meteorite is being prepared. It is the property of Professor W. E. Hidden, of the New York Academy of Sciences.

Type
Original Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1882

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References

page 356 note 1 Illustrated Scientific News, New York, 06 15, 1880, iii. No. 6, pp. 62 and 66.Google ScholarAmer. Journ. Sc. xx. 1880, 324.Google Scholar

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page 359 note 1 Brezina, A., Sitzber. K. Ahad. Wiss., 1881, lxxxiv. 07 part.Google Scholar

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page 362 note 1 Namely, by showing that the principal material of the plutonic and volcanic rocks is of cosmic origin, and that the phenomena of heat, which occur in these layers, depend on chemical changes to which the cosmic sediment, after being covered by thick terrestrial formations, is subjected.