Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-28 Thread Sterling K. Webb
Hi, Doug,

Hijacking your nice thread again...

The tektites in Tikal didn't "find their way" there
by any other means than falling out of the sky. They
have been found in the temples, anciently collected,
and one much more degraded one has been found
in the forests surrounding.

Alan Hildebrandt dated them and they fall right
into the upper end of the dating spread for Australite/
Indochinite tektites, which, surprise! they look just
exactly like. Grab your globe and give it a twirl.
Tikal's "antipodal point" is on the western edge of
the Australo-Asian strewn field. Likewise, an Ivorite
was recovered from off shore of the Australian coast.
equally antipodal to Ivory Coast, unless you think
"the currents" carried it there -:) laughing...

 Casa Grande was found in 1867: "A mass of 3407lb
was found in an ancient tomb, E.G. Tarayre (1867).
L. Fletcher (1890) implies that this mass was presented
to the Smithsonian Institution in 1876. First Description,
W. Tassin (1902). Analysis, 7.74 %Ni, G.P. Merrill (1913).
Historical note, O.E. Monnig (1939)..."

Somebody asked for referrences on meteorite collecting
by early American cultures (Maybe Ed). Here's one about
Hopewell meteorite collecting, except it goes on to discuss
dozens of other cultures, locales, and meteorites including Casa
Grandes. It's a nice piece of work by Olaf Prufer:
https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/1811/4817/1/V61N06_341.pdf

No surprize, H. H. Nininger wrote "METEORITE COLLECTING
AMONG ANCIENT AMERICANS" in 1938. That paper can be
found at:
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-7316(193807)4%3A1%3C39%3AMCAAA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-W
but it's where no mere mortal without official access can view it...
You can read the first page, though, which is enough to see that
it covers much the same ground as the paper previously cited
(up above this one) which you can get to see (and download).

Handing the thread back to you, Doug.


Sterling K. Webb
-
- Original Message - 
From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: 
Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 4:03 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Whe, Martin, thanks for the kind comments  -- I re-read my post,  your
words and by all means did take one comment very much to heart.  I'm guilty
as charged for not giving further consideration to other meteoritically
interested cultures between those Germanic and ancients.  I think Ed would
be the better expert in that department on this side of the Atlantic. You
speak of the Aztecs as a culture with as rich of a treatment of things
meteoritic as the medieval traditions in your lands... I'd like to know more
about that.

I'd be interested in knowing what meteorites the Aztecs venerated, feared,
deified, or imbued with magical qualities.  Are you perhaps thinking of
Xocotl the Aztec god of fire and Dark and occult side of planet Venus?  I
think he was more likey born spewn from a volcano, of which there are many
in his territory, or as legend goes, a ball of feathers fell in a temple his
virgin mother then bore him and others.  So Xocotl's mother may have been
fertilized by a meteorite in a stretch of faith (the feathers could be
thought of as cometary)...but these are much further musings than others
I've made:-)

Maybe your reference is meant to consider the over 1.5 ton Casas Grandes
Iron meteorite mummy found in the ruins of the temple of a mysterious
peoples of Mexico and carted out to Philadelphia, USA.  I say mysterious
peoples as I don't think you can call them Aztecs with certainty, and they
may actually be somewhat Navajo.  Unfortunately, the information on that
culture is so scant, circumstantial and too inconclusive.  But the Casas
Grandes meteorite had fallen tens of thousands of years before that region
was populated.  Thus, at best, one can imagine that it was appreciated for
its heft and unique nearly indestructable properties.

The reason I'm not sure we can call that culture Aztec, is because the
business end of the great Aztec empire was generally disconnected and
geographically no where near the southern limits of that mysterious culture,
to make tribute payments to the empire.  In fact, it seems to just
mysteroiusly vanished without battle before the Spanish first appeared
anywhere on the scene.  There is contentious speculaion that that particular
culture was from northern New Mexico near Colorado, and Ed may be able to
add more on that subject.  It seems to me they were their own independent
culture eventually centered in Paquimé, Chihuahua, very close to El Paso
TX - Juarez MX, where the meteorite was dug up.  Hopefully we can learn
more, but anything new will be an uphill battle the way the evidence is so
limited and thus 

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread Sterling K. Webb

 Hi, Doug,

   Hijacking your nice thread again...

   The tektites in Tikal didn't "find their way" there
by any other means than falling out of the sky. They
have been found in the temples, anciently collected,
and one much more degraded one has been found
in the forests surrounding.

   Alan Hildebrandt dated them and they fall right
into the upper end of the dating spread for Australite/
Indochinite tektites, which, surprise! they look just
exactly like. Grab your globe and give it a twirl.
Tikal's "antipodal point" is on the western edge of
the Australo-Asian strewn field. Likewise, an Ivorite
was recovered from off shore of the Australian coast.
equally antipodal to Ivory Coast, unless you think
"the currents" carried it there -:) laughing...

 Casa Grande was found in 1867: "A mass of 3407lb
was found in an ancient tomb, E.G. Tarayre (1867).
L. Fletcher (1890) implies that this mass was presented
to the Smithsonian Institution in 1876. First Description,
W. Tassin (1902). Analysis, 7.74 %Ni, G.P. Merrill (1913).
Historical note, O.E. Monnig (1939)..."

Somebody asked for referrences on meteorite collecting
by early American cultures (Maybe Ed). Here's one about
Hopewell meteorite collecting, except it goes on to discuss
dozens of other cultures, locales, and meteorites including Casa
Grandes. It's a nice piece of work by Olaf Prufer:
https://kb.osu.edu/dspace/bitstream/1811/4817/1/V61N06_341.pdf

No surprize, H. H. Nininger wrote "METEORITE COLLECTING
AMONG ANCIENT AMERICANS" in 1938. That paper can be
found at:
http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0002-7316(193807)4%3A1%3C39%3AMCAAA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-W
but it's where no mere mortal without official access can view it...
You can read the first page, though, which is enough to see that
it covers much the same ground as the paper previously cited
(up above this one) which you can get to see (and download).

Handing the thread back to you, Doug.


 Sterling K. Webb
> -
> - Original Message - 
> From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: 
> Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 4:03 PM
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II
>
>
> Whe, Martin, thanks for the kind comments  -- I re-read my post,  your
> words and by all means did take one comment very much to heart.  I'm 
> guilty
> as charged for not giving further consideration to other meteoritically
> interested cultures between those Germanic and ancients.  I think Ed would
> be the better expert in that department on this side of the Atlantic. You
> speak of the Aztecs as a culture with as rich of a treatment of things
> meteoritic as the medieval traditions in your lands... I'd like to know 
> more
> about that.
>
> I'd be interested in knowing what meteorites the Aztecs venerated, feared,
> deified, or imbued with magical qualities.  Are you perhaps thinking of
> Xocotl the Aztec god of fire and Dark and occult side of planet Venus?  I
> think he was more likey born spewn from a volcano, of which there are many
> in his territory, or as legend goes, a ball of feathers fell in a temple 
> his
> virgin mother then bore him and others.  So Xocotl's mother may have been
> fertilized by a meteorite in a stretch of faith (the feathers could be
> thought of as cometary)...but these are much further musings than others
> I've made:-)
>
> Maybe your reference is meant to consider the over 1.5 ton Casas Grandes
> Iron meteorite mummy found in the ruins of the temple of a mysterious
> peoples of Mexico and carted out to Philadelphia, USA.  I say mysterious
> peoples as I don't think you can call them Aztecs with certainty, and they
> may actually be somewhat Navajo.  Unfortunately, the information on that
> culture is so scant, circumstantial and too inconclusive.  But the Casas
> Grandes meteorite had fallen tens of thousands of years before that region
> was populated.  Thus, at best, one can imagine that it was appreciated for
> its heft and unique nearly indestructable properties.
>
> The reason I'm not sure we can call that culture Aztec, is because the
> business end of the great Aztec empire was generally disconnected and
> geographically no where near the southern limits of that mysterious 
> culture,
> to make tribute payments to the empire.  In fact, it seems to just
> mysteroiusly vanished without battle before the Spanish first appeared
> anywhere on the scene.  There is contentious speculaion that that 
> particular
> culture was from northern New Mexico near Colorado, and Ed may be able to
> add more on that subject.  It seems to me they were their own

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread MexicoDoug
le reason - I don't know.

But, since you mention the enlightenment to Chladni's time for things 
meteoritic, I'd say be careful not to be a fish in a fishbowl who doesn't 
appreciate the water that surrounds him as we thirsty and envious cats are 
looking in with our saucery eyes for a bite to eat.  Take explorers as 
recent as Alexander von Humboldt, who I think recovered meteoritical iron 
from Chupaderos MX most probably a few short months _before_ the French fall 
in L'Aigle reached him.  Then, he went to visit his good friend Thomas 
Jefferson in Washington for several weeks they managed to socialize many, 
many stimulating hours their mutual satisfaction, and I fully suspect that 
Jefferson would have been given the opportunity to see this, after their 
extensive scientific and social discussions.  Interestingly, L'Aigle must 
have been old news to Baron von Humboldt once he traveled from Mexico to 
Washington DC, and Humboldt was certainly up on the geological sciences from 
France (as a matter of fact he and Jefferson even corresponded in French on 
ocassion). This puts a different perspective entirely on Jefferson's famous 
satirical Yankee comments, especially knowing the master politician and 
skilled manipulator of the press in the new anarchy he delighted in.  The 
Secretary of State had to offer the Baron a visa and permit to carry many 
scientific samplings from Latin America,  Any more info you might have here? 
Would this have been discussed?  Was the iron meteorite actually collected 
in 1803 by Humboldt, part of the bill of lading, or did it somehow get into 
his possession at a later date?? These are burning questions.  Humboldt 
helped Jefferson enough to plan together the expedition for the Lousiana 
Purchase, and how to collect, I wonder if they corresponded in 1807 about 
the Weston fall?

I even live near a nice street named after Humboldt in Mexico.   Less than 
five short years in Latin America...the records of his 12 months of travels 
throughout Mexico are no doubt archived with great precision somewhere in 
Berlin and in scattered reprints in Mexico.  Which street in Munich is named 
after a Mexican explorer :-) ?

Best wishes, Doug




- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 7:33 AM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Oops Doug,

Thou shalt not over-interpret.
I can't find any increased interest in nor any cultural reception of
meteorites in German history, transcending those in other countries.
Meteorites were vulgar superstition, in best case they were kept in cabinets
as curiosities (and later after Enlightment thrown to trash).
In the Grimm collection of folk tales, the Elbogen chunk isn't mentioned as
felt from sky and it's only one story of a metamorphosis of many others (in
this case an addendum of the tale, where some dwarves were turned into
stones).
Nor aren't there many stones left from pre-1800, nor was meteoritics a
monopole of german scientists. There were many more from French, Poland,
Russia...
And if you want to ride the nationalistic horse, "Chladni" is a Slovak (or
was it Slovene name), hehe.
Science always was international, always. Remember the times of the islamic
occupation in Spain, where for centuries people bashed their heads in, but
on the other hand, the Islamic scientists were authorities in the christian
literature like the old Greeks and the Church Fathers.

Perhaps a difference is, that Chladni collected reports from old falls,
naturally a lot from German sources too, but I'm sure, that if one would
study the chronicles in other languages and countries, there are also a lot
to be found. (recently someone sent me a cool fireball report from a local
Church's chronicle from 17th century).

And if you refer to the Ensisheim stone, remember the pamphlets following
the fall, where that fall was taken for an evil omen.
Thus following the hysterical tradition, that all uncommon phenomena in
nature would be bad signs of God's wrath - and in this respect, Europe is
quite unique, because, as far as I know, in all other cultures, where
meteorites are mentioned (or found), meteorites never had bad connotations.

" and that Generally that Germans attributed mystical
powers to meteorites like no other culture since the ancients".

See above and certainly not: Indonesia, Mongolia, Japan, the Inuit, the
American Indians, for the Aztecs, Inka ect, you have to look, Arabia and so
on I guess quite everywhere meteorites were venerated or at least used for
tools or jewellery. Would be a nice new thread!

Has anyone pictures of the bracelets of meteoritic iron from 7th-5th century
b.C. in the museum of Czestochowa Rakow in Poland, Marcin?

Eh and Doug, there wasn't any German national "identity&qu

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread MexicoDoug
the simple reason - I don't know - that sounds like an Ed question..

But, since you mention from the enlightenment to Chladni's time for things
meteoritic, I'd say be careful not to be a fish in a fishbowl who doesn't
appreciate the water that surrounds him as we thirsty and envious cats are
looking in with our saucery eyes for a bite to eat.  Take explorers as
recent as Baron Alexander von Humboldt, who I think recovered
meteoritical iron originally from Chupaderos Mexico most probably a few
 short months _before_ the French fall in L'Aigle reached him.

Then, he went to visit his good friend Thomas Jefferson in Washington for
several weeks they managed to socialize many, many stimulating hours
their mutual satisfaction, and I fully suspect that Jefferson would have 
been
 given the opportunity to see this, after their extensive scientific and 
social
discussions.  Interestingly, L'Aigle must have been old news to Baron von
Humboldt once he traveled from Mexico to Washington DC, and Humboldt
was certainly up on the geological sciences from France (as a matter of fact
he and Jefferson even corresponded in French on ocassion). This puts a
different perspective entirely on Jefferson's famous satirical Yankee
comments, especially knowing the master politician and skilled manipulator
of the press in the new anarchy called representative democracy he
delighted in.  The Secretary of State had to offer the Baron a visa and 
permit
to carry many scientific samplings from Latin America,  Any more info you
might have here? Would this have been discussed?  Was the iron meteorite
actually collected in 1803 by Humboldt, part of the bill of lading, or did 
it
somehow get into his possession at a later date??  What was it initially
thought to be before further studies back home in Germany? These are
burning questions.  Humboldt helped Jefferson enough to plan together
the expedition for the Lousiana Purchase, and how to collect, I wonder if
they corresponded in 1807 about the Weston fall?

I even live near a nice street named after Humboldt in Mexico.   Less than
five short years in Latin America...the records of his 12 months of travels
throughout Mexico are no doubt archived with great precision somewhere in
Berlin and in scattered reprints in Mexico.  Which street in Munich is named
after a Mexican explorer :-) ?

Best wishes, Doug


- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;

Sent: Monday, November 27, 2006 7:33 AM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Oops Doug,

Thou shalt not over-interpret.
I can't find any increased interest in nor any cultural reception of
meteorites in German history, transcending those in other countries.
Meteorites were vulgar superstition, in best case they were kept in cabinets
as curiosities (and later after Enlightment thrown to trash).
In the Grimm collection of folk tales, the Elbogen chunk isn't mentioned as
felt from sky and it's only one story of a metamorphosis of many others (in
this case an addendum of the tale, where some dwarves were turned into
stones).
Nor aren't there many stones left from pre-1800, nor was meteoritics a
monopole of german scientists. There were many more from French, Poland,
Russia...
And if you want to ride the nationalistic horse, "Chladni" is a Slovak (or
was it Slovene name), hehe.
Science always was international, always. Remember the times of the islamic
occupation in Spain, where for centuries people bashed their heads in, but
on the other hand, the Islamic scientists were authorities in the christian
literature like the old Greeks and the Church Fathers.

Perhaps a difference is, that Chladni collected reports from old falls,
naturally a lot from German sources too, but I'm sure, that if one would
study the chronicles in other languages and countries, there are also a lot
to be found. (recently someone sent me a cool fireball report from a local
Church's chronicle from 17th century).

And if you refer to the Ensisheim stone, remember the pamphlets following
the fall, where that fall was taken for an evil omen.
Thus following the hysterical tradition, that all uncommon phenomena in
nature would be bad signs of God's wrath - and in this respect, Europe is
quite unique, because, as far as I know, in all other cultures, where
meteorites are mentioned (or found), meteorites never had bad connotations.

" and that Generally that Germans attributed mystical
powers to meteorites like no other culture since the ancients".

See above and certainly not: Indonesia, Mongolia, Japan, the Inuit, the
American Indians, for the Aztecs, Inka ect, you have to look, Arabia and so
on I guess quite everywhere meteorites were venerated or at least used for
tools or jewellery. Would be a nice new thread!

Has anyone pictures of the bracelets of meteoritic 

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread E.P. Grondine
ve been ahead of the Americans (one can easily
> imagine that the Americans 
> followed the French lead), I believe the
> Franco-Germanic relationship 
> strongly colored the French acceptance of
> meteoritical phenomena and gets to 
> the heart of meteorite status in the milieu.  I.e.,
> I bet in the 1740's part 
> of the reason the Elbogen meteorite got such harsh
> treatment was due to the 
> memory of Ensisheim having been declared a favorable
> German icon to unite in 
> the war against France, and that Generally that
> Germans attributed mystical 
> powers to meteorites like no other culture since the
> ancients.  I think the 
> French were strongly influenced by the widespread
> meteorite reverance 
> thoughout Germanic cultures (take Grimms' tales and
> Martin's stories of the 
> converted burgrave on Elbogen, and German
> fascination with hammers, axes and 
> metal in general and a its possible relationship to
> meteoritic iron), which 
> provided resistance to recognizing that meteorites
> really did come from 
> heaven as their competing Germanic neighbors
> believed...
> 
> Best wishes,
> Doug
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> - Original Message - 
> From: "Sterling K. Webb"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Meteorite List"
> 
> Cc: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Martin
> Altmann" 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2006 9:04 PM
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels
> -gifts II
> 
> 
> > Hi, Doug, Martin, List,
> >
> >Operating on the principle that the longer I
> talk,
> > the more likely my chance to really annoy someone
> > becomes, I snipped a lot of sentences out of what
> > I originally wrote.
> >
> >The history of the USA up until 1900-1910 is
> best
> > described as a kind of "ongoing conflict,"
> somewhat
> > short of formal war. I was going to say that, so
> no
> > disagreement there. In fact, the history of most
> nations
> > can be so described with some accuracy.
> >
> >Even with Martin's addition of a few hundred
> more
> > wars for Europe, there's a background of conflict
> that
> > generates them. The Serbian obsession with Kosovo,
> > its ancient "homeland," dates from a conquest late
> in
> > the first millennium AD of the people who still
> live there,
> > the Illyrians, or rather their descendents, who
> were there
> > before the first millennium BC, which makes the
> Serbian
> > "historical" claim look a little silly.
> >
> >But these ethnic histories solve nothing; one
> has only
> > to look at the Middle East to have that
> demonstrated.
> > Such arguments over who is exclusively entitled to
> the
> > "land" are endless, unending, and productive of
> nothing
> > but carnage, even between folks as completely and
> > totally indistinguishable as two Irishmen.
> >
> >United Statesians (so as to avoid the
> over-broad usage
> > of "Americans") mostly have what is so often
> called a
> > "naive" view: "Why doesn't everybody just forget
> about
> > settling the score for the past and try to work on
> solving
> > the problems that exist NOW?"
> >
> >The scorn of the sophisticated not
> withstanding, there
> > is a another name for this: SANITY. If the price
> of this
> > mental health is to be achieved by, say, modern
> Europeans,
> > acting as if THEY never had a war, being morally
> superior
> > to those so backward as to get stuck in conflicts,
> well,
> > sanity is worth that. That IS the idea -- to dump
> the past.
> > "History," said James Joyce a century ago, "is a
> nightmare
> > I'm trying to wake up from."
> >
> >> does Europe have a "Battle of Little Bighorn",
> which...
> >> was the fight leading to the demise of a race of
> people?
> >
> >Duh. Yeah! And the Sioux (and all the other
> tribes
> > that participated in an INDIAN victory there)
> still exist,
> > no thanks to General Custer, just as Jews still
> exist, no
> > thanks to... We weren't going to drag up the past,
> > were we?
> >
> >> if the Indians had caught on quicker...
> >
> >American natives caught on right away. They
> each
> > and all sat in council about what to do about the
> odd
> > newcomers from the very year they first showed up!
> > Every strategy you can

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread Martin Altmann
Oops Doug,

Thou shalt not over-interpret.
I can't find any increased interest in nor any cultural reception of
meteorites in German history, transcending those in other countries.
Meteorites were vulgar superstition, in best case they were kept in cabinets
as curiosities (and later after Enlightment thrown to trash).
In the Grimm collection of folk tales, the Elbogen chunk isn't mentioned as
felt from sky and it's only one story of a metamorphosis of many others (in
this case an addendum of the tale, where some dwarves were turned into
stones).
Nor aren't there many stones left from pre-1800, nor was meteoritics a
monopole of german scientists. There were many more from French, Poland,
Russia...
And if you want to ride the nationalistic horse, "Chladni" is a Slovak (or
was it Slovene name), hehe.
Science always was international, always. Remember the times of the islamic
occupation in Spain, where for centuries people bashed their heads in, but
on the other hand, the Islamic scientists were authorities in the christian
literature like the old Greeks and the Church Fathers.

Perhaps a difference is, that Chladni collected reports from old falls,
naturally a lot from German sources too, but I'm sure, that if one would
study the chronicles in other languages and countries, there are also a lot
to be found. (recently someone sent me a cool fireball report from a local
Church's chronicle from 17th century).

And if you refer to the Ensisheim stone, remember the pamphlets following
the fall, where that fall was taken for an evil omen. 
Thus following the hysterical tradition, that all uncommon phenomena in
nature would be bad signs of God's wrath - and in this respect, Europe is
quite unique, because, as far as I know, in all other cultures, where
meteorites are mentioned (or found), meteorites never had bad connotations.

" and that Generally that Germans attributed mystical 
powers to meteorites like no other culture since the ancients".

See above and certainly not: Indonesia, Mongolia, Japan, the Inuit, the
American Indians, for the Aztecs, Inka ect, you have to look, Arabia and so
on I guess quite everywhere meteorites were venerated or at least used for
tools or jewellery. Would be a nice new thread!

Has anyone pictures of the bracelets of meteoritic iron from 7th-5th century
b.C. in the museum of Czestochowa Rakow in Poland, Marcin?

Eh and Doug, there wasn't any German national "identity" until 19th century.
And go a little bit back, Charlemagne, were where there the French, where
the Germans? It was always multi-ethnical. The racism, if I let the history
of colonisation aside and the exaggerated nationalism was rather an
invention of the 19th century. And thus I guess Sterling and me didn't want
to depress you, as there is hope, for at least some parts on the globe.
Meanwhile we are living in a much more communicative, mobile (and
hedonistic?) world, in Europe people remember the high price they had to pay
for nationalistic insanity, a little bit bad is, that the principle of Cold
War had worked well...
At least Doug, the preconditions are somewhat better, than they were ever
before.

Let's have new thread. Pre A.D. 1800 meteoritics!
Dirk tell us about Asia!
Norbert, Australia?
Marie-Pelé France?
Serguej, Russia?
Andrzej Poland.
Rob, da Commonwealth?
Christian K&K meteorites.
Manjoi - India!
Joern Germany.
Africa?
Doug - Middle America
And so on!

Buckleboo!
Martin








-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
MexicoDoug
Gesendet: Montag, 27. November 2006 11:54
An: Sterling K. Webb
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Sterling,

1-The fact that the French army wanted to enrage the Bohemians by tossing 
the Elbogen iron meteorite in the well is indisputable.  This meteorite is 
Grade A Prime cultural heritage for Bohemia where many ethnic Germans lived 
and was ethnically a contested territory in my understanding.  The French 
actions were part of the hostilities kicked off by the War of Jenkins' Ear 
which morphed into that of Austrian Succession there.  The exciting point 
being that Germans/Bohemians had a cultural appreciation of meteorites which

truly raptures my imagination with pride, cultural curiousity and a transfer

of a certain degree of magic in my mind's eye, due to my own fascination 
with steel from space.

2- My mention of the then Governer of Georgia, Gen. Oglethorpe's bellicose 
expedition of Georgians and Carolinians was to bring to your attention this 
large American campaign in the War of Jenkins' Ear, intended to correct your

statement that Americans never had the odd pleasure of partaking in that 
euphonious war (Soundly put!).

Nothing much I can do about wars despite my heart's desires, other than hope

I would not be called to participate i

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread MexicoDoug
Hi Sterling,

1-The fact that the French army wanted to enrage the Bohemians by tossing 
the Elbogen iron meteorite in the well is indisputable.  This meteorite is 
Grade A Prime cultural heritage for Bohemia where many ethnic Germans lived 
and was ethnically a contested territory in my understanding.  The French 
actions were part of the hostilities kicked off by the War of Jenkins' Ear 
which morphed into that of Austrian Succession there.  The exciting point 
being that Germans/Bohemians had a cultural appreciation of meteorites which 
truly raptures my imagination with pride, cultural curiousity and a transfer 
of a certain degree of magic in my mind's eye, due to my own fascination 
with steel from space.

2- My mention of the then Governer of Georgia, Gen. Oglethorpe's bellicose 
expedition of Georgians and Carolinians was to bring to your attention this 
large American campaign in the War of Jenkins' Ear, intended to correct your 
statement that Americans never had the odd pleasure of partaking in that 
euphonious war (Soundly put!).

Nothing much I can do about wars despite my heart's desires, other than hope 
I would not be called to participate in them.  I really have absolutely no 
opinions or desire to think about human intraspecies' inhumanity.

I'll tender a request for a favor that my kindly hijacked thread be returned 
to romantic, fantasy and other fictional books on meteorites.  I have to 
admit to believing that anything goes in a discussion group, but was unhappy 
that a thread on romantic and adventure novels with meteorites in their 
plots turned into a discussion of how Europe had more and longer wars than 
the USA. :-( !

.  ... to imagine the relationship between Caledfwlch, Gram, Hrunting, 
Naegling, the Magical Giant Sword that slew Grendel's mother, so difficult 
to hoist or lift up is a recurring theme, and meteorites, which held a 
special fascination in Germanic cultures and craftmanships is very amazing, 
though.  The stone Ensisheim, which fell in German territory at the time was 
recognized by the German Emperor in 1492 to have come from the sky, and 
ordered conserved thanks to him.  It is interesting that the "civilized 
world" didn't really "accept" that rock fell from space until L'Aigle 
pummeled the last holdouts in France more than 300 years later, like a 
thunder fromThor's hammer.  With the greatest respect to France, who seem to 
have been ahead of the Americans (one can easily imagine that the Americans 
followed the French lead), I believe the Franco-Germanic relationship 
strongly colored the French acceptance of meteoritical phenomena and gets to 
the heart of meteorite status in the milieu.  I.e., I bet in the 1740's part 
of the reason the Elbogen meteorite got such harsh treatment was due to the 
memory of Ensisheim having been declared a favorable German icon to unite in 
the war against France, and that Generally that Germans attributed mystical 
powers to meteorites like no other culture since the ancients.  I think the 
French were strongly influenced by the widespread meteorite reverance 
thoughout Germanic cultures (take Grimms' tales and Martin's stories of the 
converted burgrave on Elbogen, and German fascination with hammers, axes and 
metal in general and a its possible relationship to meteoritic iron), which 
provided resistance to recognizing that meteorites really did come from 
heaven as their competing Germanic neighbors believed...

Best wishes,
Doug





- Original Message - 
From: "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Meteorite List" 
Cc: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Martin Altmann" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Sunday, November 26, 2006 9:04 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


> Hi, Doug, Martin, List,
>
>Operating on the principle that the longer I talk,
> the more likely my chance to really annoy someone
> becomes, I snipped a lot of sentences out of what
> I originally wrote.
>
>The history of the USA up until 1900-1910 is best
> described as a kind of "ongoing conflict," somewhat
> short of formal war. I was going to say that, so no
> disagreement there. In fact, the history of most nations
> can be so described with some accuracy.
>
>Even with Martin's addition of a few hundred more
> wars for Europe, there's a background of conflict that
> generates them. The Serbian obsession with Kosovo,
> its ancient "homeland," dates from a conquest late in
> the first millennium AD of the people who still live there,
> the Illyrians, or rather their descendents, who were there
> before the first millennium BC, which makes the Serbian
> "historical" claim look a little silly.
>
>But these ethnic histories solve nothing; one ha

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-27 Thread E.P. Grondine
of Bloody Marsh, Doug, but I will
> remind
> you that it took place after Jerkins carted his
> ear-in-a-jar
> up to the British Parliment and got Walpole to
> declare
> the Ear War. Had the fortunes of war fallen
> differently,
> why, you would be walking the picturesque calles de
> Neuvo Atlanta, capitol of Las Floridas del Norte,
> while
> avoiding the camera-toting USian tourists in their
> garish
> shirts and plastic flip-flops...
> 
> I would love to "kick around" the causes of the
> five-day "Football War" with you, Doug, but I think
> that it breaks the tenuous chain that links Jenkins'
> ear
> to a wet meteorite in a moat surrounded by mocking
> Frenchmen!
> 
> 
> Sterling K. Webb
>
--
> And Bill just summed it up in three sentences better
> than either of us, I think...
>
--
> - Original Message - 
> From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Sterling K. Webb"
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc: 
> Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 8:56 PM
> Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels
> -gifts II
> 
> 
> > Sterling wrote:
> > "1739-1740 War of Jenkins' Ear"
> > "And [the USA's] certainly never managed to have a
> war as magnificently 
> > named as "The War of Jenkins' Ear"! Now, that's
> how to name a war! Clear, 
> > concise, and everybody knows exactly what it's all
> about."
> >
> > Hey Sterling,
> >
> > Hah! remember studies in Western Civ - between
> Physics and philosophy 
> > class :-) -, really, the USA has darn well so
> managed to have a war 
> > equally magnificient in name as the "War of
> Jenkin's Ear".
> >
> > It was called "The War of Jenkin's Ear"; Same
> Jenkins - and it wasn't 
> > Jenkin's other ear.  Don't forget that Jenkin's
> ear was supposedly severed 
> > in the Americas, and he was as English as George
> Washington at the time. 
> > So I'd Argue that not only did the Americans
> participate in that war - 
> > they also started it.  Not to mention the USA
> started the funiest named 
> > war of all: The "Quasi-War" as thanks to the
> French right after the French 
> > supported the American Independence effort.
> >
> > That particular Jenkin's Ear war in the 1740's is
> actually the same war 
> > that was contracted by the European continent and
> spread to Bohemia and 
> > resulted in the French tossing the Elbogen Iron
> meteorite down the to the 
> > bottom of the Bohemian well where it rusted for 40
> years.  It was a small 
> > world back then, too.  In the USA, in the great
> American State of Georgia, 
> > the military general who founded Georgia wasted no
> time to marshal his 
> > proud Savannah compatriots and adventurous
> Charlestonians out of South 
> > Carolina to pillage everything from Jacksonville,
> Florida to St. 
> > Augustine, and that was only openers.
> >
> > Oh the United States has had oogles more
> practically nameless wars than 
> > you give it credit for in those years.  They don't
> Google easily out of a 
> > database like your nice European ones, but they
> were bloodier if Indians 
> > are men considered equal in the eyes of the
> Creator.  You've got to 
> > consider that in Europe all those wars were spread
> among 20-30 countries. 
> > How many Indian real nations do you think the
> singular USA trounced in a 
> > religious ferver to achieve its destiny?  The USA
> is a nation that was 
> > perpetually at war on its own and its extended
> frontiers.  There are more 
> > Indian wars alone, than Indian nations that
> yielded in defeat against the 
> > cleansing of the continent from Atlantic to
> Pacific.  Take Florida, which 
> > heaped war upon wars, genocide and forced
> relocation.  Or maybe Missouri - 
> > if the Indians had caught on quicker, you might be
> living in a teepee 
> > today, or at least your neighbor  :-)
> >
> > As for the lack of colorful names of wars in the
> USA even without 
> > considering who started the War of Jenkin's Ear,
> does Europe have a 
> > "Battle of Little Bighorn", which is a battle the
> war easily can assume 
> > for the name, and really was the fight leading to
> the demise of a race of 
> > people? If that isn't enough, how about the
> Gipper's "Star Wars", who has 
> > one of those programs besides George Lucas?  And I
> am convinced that the 
> > US participated as a silent partner in the
> infamous "Football War," as 
> > well...
> >
> > Best wishes, Doug
> > (no slights to any nation, no offense; we are who
> we are and I can live 
> > with that just fine, until someone else tosses a
> spectacular iron in a 
> > well to fester.  Guess the Evian was too depleted
> in minerals for their 
> > taste)
> >
> >
> > thread truncated...
> 
> 
> __
> Meteorite-list mailing list
> Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
>
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> 



 

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Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-26 Thread Sterling K. Webb
Hi, Doug, Martin, List,

Operating on the principle that the longer I talk,
the more likely my chance to really annoy someone
becomes, I snipped a lot of sentences out of what
I originally wrote.

The history of the USA up until 1900-1910 is best
described as a kind of "ongoing conflict," somewhat
short of formal war. I was going to say that, so no
disagreement there. In fact, the history of most nations
can be so described with some accuracy.

Even with Martin's addition of a few hundred more
wars for Europe, there's a background of conflict that
generates them. The Serbian obsession with Kosovo,
its ancient "homeland," dates from a conquest late in
the first millennium AD of the people who still live there,
the Illyrians, or rather their descendents, who were there
before the first millennium BC, which makes the Serbian
"historical" claim look a little silly.

But these ethnic histories solve nothing; one has only
to look at the Middle East to have that demonstrated.
Such arguments over who is exclusively entitled to the
"land" are endless, unending, and productive of nothing
but carnage, even between folks as completely and
totally indistinguishable as two Irishmen.

United Statesians (so as to avoid the over-broad usage
of "Americans") mostly have what is so often called a
"naive" view: "Why doesn't everybody just forget about
settling the score for the past and try to work on solving
the problems that exist NOW?"

The scorn of the sophisticated not withstanding, there
is a another name for this: SANITY. If the price of this
mental health is to be achieved by, say, modern Europeans,
acting as if THEY never had a war, being morally superior
to those so backward as to get stuck in conflicts, well,
sanity is worth that. That IS the idea -- to dump the past.
"History," said James Joyce a century ago, "is a nightmare
I'm trying to wake up from."

> does Europe have a "Battle of Little Bighorn", which...
> was the fight leading to the demise of a race of people?

Duh. Yeah! And the Sioux (and all the other tribes
that participated in an INDIAN victory there) still exist,
no thanks to General Custer, just as Jews still exist, no
thanks to... We weren't going to drag up the past,
were we?

> if the Indians had caught on quicker...

American natives caught on right away. They each
and all sat in council about what to do about the odd
newcomers from the very year they first showed up!
Every strategy you can imagine was tried. It's common-
place to present these centuries of native statecraft as
if they all sat there like idiots until the late 1800's, but
that notion is what is really demeaning. A delay of a
potential annihilation for centuries is a major achievement;
there are innumerable spots around the globe where
indigenous peoples have been destroyed in a decade
or three. As for uniting scores, even hundreds, of
nations with no common language, belief, or culture,
ask Tecumseh about how that worked out...

The real "war" was epidemiological. The "Black
Death" made its way into North America ahead of the
Europeans, in the 15th century, and was followed
shortly by a flood of new European diseases in the
next century. Europeans, in person, were entering
devastated and de-populated lands everywhere in
the "New World," north and south. Not that they
weren't trying to kill the locals, just that their efforts
were puny compared to what the microbes (whose
existence both sides were unaware of) accomplished.
It's hard to slow down an invasion when your own
population is reduced by up to 90%!

I'm sorry you were so upset by General Oglethorpe
and the Battle of Bloody Marsh, Doug, but I will remind
you that it took place after Jerkins carted his ear-in-a-jar
up to the British Parliment and got Walpole to declare
the Ear War. Had the fortunes of war fallen differently,
why, you would be walking the picturesque calles de
Neuvo Atlanta, capitol of Las Floridas del Norte, while
avoiding the camera-toting USian tourists in their garish
shirts and plastic flip-flops...

I would love to "kick around" the causes of the
five-day "Football War" with you, Doug, but I think
that it breaks the tenuous chain that links Jenkins' ear
to a wet meteorite in a moat surrounded by mocking
Frenchmen!


Sterling K. Webb
--
And Bill just summed it up in three sentences better
than either of us, I think...
--------------
- Original Message - 
From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc: 
Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 8:56 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


> S

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-26 Thread Göran Axelsson
Couldn't let this topic pass by without making a post.

One of the most fantastic books in my library is "Hector Servadac" by 
Jules Verne.
In it a comet is picking up part of the Earth (with some inhabitants) 
and brings it along on a fantastic journey. The interesting thing isn't 
the journey in it self, but the description of the different people that 
went along. All from the great french officers, stubborn brittish and a 
crooked jew. I gives a nice view of what the mindset was among the 
people in Europe late in the 19:th century.

Full text in French : http://jv.gilead.org.il/zydorczak/ser00.htm
... or in English from Project Gutenberg http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/1353

... kind of explains the many wars we have had in Europe... to connect 
on another topic discussed here.

  :-)

/Göran

MexicoDoug wrote:
> Hello Listees, again,
>
> ...today, I imagine several cheering their Cheshire grins and feeding their 
> fattened guts...sitting on the sofa and still smacking the lips like the cat 
> that swallowed little Tweety...
>
> Right or wrong, it's said there's something fulfilling for the man that can 
> do three things before he dies: Have a Son, Write a book, and Plant a 
> tree...(wheew - lot of work left to do)  I'm sure I've missed more books 
> than I've listed  which are fictional novels relating somehow to meteorites, 
> but here are two more (the second one is an online ditty) written by list 
> member which have special reasons not to be left out,
>
> ADVENTURES OF DIANA: THE UNDERWORLD by Jim Balister
> Popular Action book off the presses recently which follows a plain-Jane girl 
> named Diana loses her job, and while looking for a new one meets the love of 
> her life, David, who happens to be a meteorite collector, among other 
> things.  At one point they spot a fireball and try to recover it.  One day, 
> in this sweet midwestern American boredom, the Earth takes a turn 
> unexpectedly and quake hits, followed by every extraterrestrial, 
> governmental plague and monsterous vermin that can be thrown at its 
> inhabitants, including Diana.  With the help of a geologist, Diana goes down 
> a pit where they find a flying saucer that kidnaps them, one mishap and 
> incredible recovery takes place after another, the upper and lower worlds, 
> with almost all their monsters and creatures facing destruction.  But then 
> Diana meets someone important and she yearns to reestablish her life and 
> settle down with David...
>
> STAR MONEY by the Bros. Altmann (jeje)
> A short fable summarized by our very favorite Germans, based on the original 
> which was probably much older than the 1803 L'Aigle fall itself.  Gives 
> great insight to cultural fantasies of the significance of meteorites in the 
> deep recesses of human thought.  Interestingly, in an odd twist, it 
> personifies what we all yearn in meteorite hunting in one form or 
> another...READ THE ENGLISH translation free here, no need to buy the book, 
> compiled by the namsake of Chladni's heirs:  Story featured in Nation 
> Geographic:
>
> http://www.nationalgeographic.com/grimm/star_money2.html
>
> Best wishes, Doug
>
>
>
>
> - Original Message - 
> From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: 
> Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 4:30 AM
> Subject: [meteorite-list] List of Meteorite novels for gifts
>
>
>   
>> Hola Listees,
>>
>> Thanks very kindly for the meteorite fictional book ideas many of you 
>> kindly
>> sent in response to my post the other day.
>>
>> I thought I would post a summary in case anyone else was looking for gift
>> ideas for friends family or loved ones.
>>
>> First, I'll tell you the book I decided to get for a special person (just
>> received today!!!), followed by a list of other books (for which I owe
>> thanks to everyone who helped me out on and off list):
>>
>> Winner:  STARDUST, (Spanish Title: Lluvia de Estrellas = Meteor Shower-) 
>> by
>> Neil Gaiman
>> This is a romantic fantasy about the faeries and struck ones in the nicest
>> sense.  While it seems like it is written for children, the naughty author
>> has the meteorite curse after her painful atmospheric entry, and there is 
>> a
>> bit of steamy sex to whet some folks appetites... Two cultures somewhere 
>> in
>> the English countryside are divided by a wall every day except one in 9
>> years.  An adventurous young man with an interesting birthright is with 
>> the
>> prettiest girl in the nondescript human village inside the stone wall.
>> Victoria owns his heart, but, she doesn't care much for Tristran.  They 
>> gaze
>> into the sky when witnessing the ground shaking and thunder accompanying a
>> shooting star.  It begins as a small light, but quickly outshines the Moon
>> and brilliantly falls somewhere on the other side of the wall, where there
>> are enchanted meadows, trees and their inhabitants.  The young man 
>> Tristran
>> is so blinded by love that he somehow becomes obsessed with the labor to
>> recover the fallen star and b

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-26 Thread Martin Altmann
Hi Sterling,

There were hundreds more, here only a few to add to your list.
No year without war...

1342-1346 Thuringia feud of earls
1360-1365 1st Hanseatic War
1370-1388 War of the Lueneburg Succession
1398-1408 Appenzell Wars
1412Flailers War
1419-1432 Hussitic Wars
1423-1430 1st Venetian-Turkish War
1436-1450 Old Zurich War
1446-1451 Saxonian fratricidal War
1449-1451 1st War of Margraves
1461-1462 Baden-Palatinate War
1463-1479 2nd Venetian-Turkish War
1474-1477 Burgundy Wars
1494-1559 Great Italian Wars
1499 Swabian War
1499-1503 2nd Venetian-Turkish War  
1520-1521 Comuneros Rebellion
1521-1523 Swedish Liberation War
1521-1526 Ottoman-Hungarian War
1522-1523 Palatine Knight Rebellion
1524-1526 German Peasant War
1526-1555 Austro-Venetian-Turkish War
1526-1538 Hungarian Civil War
1531 Swiss Civil War
1534-1536 The Counts' Feud (Denmark)
1546-1547 Schmalkaldian War
1552-1557 2nd War of Margraves
1562-1563 1st Huguenot War
1563-1570 Northern Seven Year's War
1566-1568 2nd Austro-Turkish War
1567-1568 2nd Huguenot War
1568-1570 3rd Huguenot War
1570-1573 5th Ventian-Turkish War
1572-1573 4th Huguenot War
1574-1580 Huguenot Wars #4-#7
1580-1583 Portuguese Civil War
1583-1588 Truchsessian War
1585-1590 8th Huguenot War
1593-1615 3rd Austro-Ottoman War
1595-1597 2nd Austrian Peasant War
1598-1629 1st Swedish-Polish War
1609-1618 1st Russian-Polish War
1611-1613 Kalmar War
1613-1617 Swedish-Russian War
1614-1621 Polish-Turkish War 
1624-1654 Dutch-Portuguese War
1626 Autrian Peasant War
1629-1631 Succession War of Mantua
1632-1634 2nd Russo-Polish War
1635-1639 Pyrenees War
1643-1645 Torstensson War
1645-1669 6th Venetian-Turkish War
1652-1654 1st Anglo-Dutch War
1654-1656 3rd Russo-Polish War
1654-1660 Anglo-Spanish War
1655-1661 Northern Wars
1657-1668 Spanish-Portuguese War
1658-1667 4th Russo-Polish War
1659-1668 Restoration War
1663-1664 4th Austro-Turkish War
1665-1667 2nd Anglo-Dutch War
1671-1676 Polish-Turkish War
1672-1674 3rd Anglo-Dutch War
1672-1678 French-Dutch War
1674-1678 Swedish-Brandenburg Wars
1675-1679 Scanian War
1683-1699 5th Austro-/1st Russo-/ 7th Venetian Turkish War
1688-1697 War of the Grand Alliance
1695-1700 2nd Russo-Turkish War

Well, so I guess we have only to tell to those Taliban on both sides in
Northern-Ireland to go to that hell, they're believing in, to show to the
Basques, that they can proceed with their folklore in peace, as the
Bavarians did, when they were sold to the Prussians, to instruct the few
rassistic idiots on Balkan, not to do it again, and for that Hitler from
Belarus the UN should buy an exile in Switzerland,
And then it will look quite good.

How to get that together with meteorites?
Those endless battles made it very difficult to hunt with detectors in
Europe for meteorites.

Peaceful Weekend!
Martin



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von Sterling
K. Webb
Gesendet: Sonntag, 26. November 2006 02:34
An: 'MexicoDoug'; Martin Altmann; meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Martin Altmann said:

> There were always wars, wars, wars...
> funny enough, people now ranting about
> the European Union always forget...

1337-1453 Hundred Years' War
1455-1485 Wars of the Roses
1496-1499 Russo-Swedish War of 1496-1499
1522-1559 Habsburg-Valois Wars
1554-1557 Russo-Swedish War of 1554-1557
1558-1583 Livonian War
1568-1648 Eighty Years' War
1590-1595 Russo-Swedish War of 1590-1595
1594-1603 Nine Years' War (Ireland)
1610-1617 Ingrian War
1618-1648 Thirty Years' War
1641-1649 Wars of Castro
1641-1653 Irish Confederate Wars
1642-1651 English Civil War
1644-1650 Scottish Civil War
1656-1658 Russo-Swedish War of 1656-1658
1667-1668 War of Devolution
1667-1683 Great Turkish War
1688-1691 Williamite War in Ireland
1700-1721 Great Northern War
1701-1713 War of the Spanish Succession
1733-1738 War of the Polish Succession
1739-1740 War of Jenkins' Ear
1740-1748 War of the Austrian Succession
1741-1743 Russo-Swedish War of 1741-1743
1756-1763 Seven Years' War
1788-1790 Russo-Swedish War of 1788-1790
1789-1799 French Revolution
1798 Irish Rebellion of 1798
1792-1815 Napoleonic Wars
1808-1809 Finnish War
1848-1866 Italian Independence wars
1848-1849 First Italian Independence War
1859 Second Italian Independence War
1866 Third Italian Independence War
1854-1856 Crimean War
1866-1866 Austro-Prussian War
1870-1871 Franco-Prussian War
1877-1878 Russo-Turkish War
1893-1896 Cod War of 1893
1897 First Greco-Turkish War
1912-1913 Balkan Wars
1914-1918 World War I
1916 Easter Rising
1917-1920 Estonian Liberation War
1918-1919 Czechoslovakia-Hungary War
1918 Finnish Civil War
1918-1920 Russian Civil War
1919-1921 Irish War of Independence
1922-1923 Irish Civil War
1936-1939 Spanish Civil War
1939-1940 Winter War
1939-1945 World War II
1958 First Cod War
1972-1973 Second Cod War
1974 Tu

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Darren Garrison
On Sat, 25 Nov 2006 19:34:06 -0600, you wrote:

>do that in Iraq). And we've certainly never managed
>to have a war as magnificently named as "The
>War of Jenkins' Ear"! 

Well, now we have The War of He Tried To Kill My Daddy.
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Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread MexicoDoug
Sterling wrote:
"1739-1740 War of Jenkins' Ear"
"And [the USA's] certainly never managed to have a war as magnificently 
named as "The War of Jenkins' Ear"! Now, that's how to name a war! Clear, 
concise, and everybody knows exactly what it's all about."

Hey Sterling,

Hah! remember studies in Western Civ - between Physics and philosophy class 
:-) -, really, the USA has darn well so managed to have a war equally 
magnificient in name as the "War of Jenkin's Ear".

It was called "The War of Jenkin's Ear"; Same Jenkins - and it wasn't 
Jenkin's other ear.  Don't forget that Jenkin's ear was supposedly severed 
in the Americas, and he was as English as George Washington at the time.  So 
I'd Argue that not only did the Americans participate in that war - they 
also started it.  Not to mention the USA started the funiest named war of 
all: The "Quasi-War" as thanks to the French right after the French 
supported the American Independence effort.

That particular Jenkin's Ear war in the 1740's is actually the same war that 
was contracted by the European continent and spread to Bohemia and resulted 
in the French tossing the Elbogen Iron meteorite down the to the bottom of 
the Bohemian well where it rusted for 40 years.  It was a small world back 
then, too.  In the USA, in the great American State of Georgia, the military 
general who founded Georgia wasted no time to marshal his proud Savannah 
compatriots and adventurous Charlestonians out of South Carolina to pillage 
everything from Jacksonville, Florida to St. Augustine, and that was only 
openers.

Oh the United States has had oogles more practically nameless wars than you 
give it credit for in those years.  They don't Google easily out of a 
database like your nice European ones, but they were bloodier if Indians are 
men considered equal in the eyes of the Creator.  You've got to consider 
that in Europe all those wars were spread among 20-30 countries.  How many 
Indian real nations do you think the singular USA trounced in a religious 
ferver to achieve its destiny?  The USA is a nation that was perpetually at 
war on its own and its extended frontiers.  There are more Indian wars 
alone, than Indian nations that yielded in defeat against the cleansing of 
the continent from Atlantic to Pacific.  Take Florida, which heaped war upon 
wars, genocide and forced relocation.  Or maybe Missouri - if the Indians 
had caught on quicker, you might be living in a teepee today, or at least 
your neighbor  :-)

As for the lack of colorful names of wars in the USA even without 
considering who started the War of Jenkin's Ear, does Europe have a "Battle 
of Little Bighorn", which is a battle the war easily can assume for the 
name, and really was the fight leading to the demise of a race of people? 
If that isn't enough, how about the Gipper's "Star Wars", who has one of 
those programs besides George Lucas?  And I am convinced that the US 
participated as a silent partner in the infamous "Football War," as well...

Best wishes, Doug
(no slights to any nation, no offense; we are who we are and I can live with 
that just fine, until someone else tosses a spectacular iron in a well to 
fester.  Guess the Evian was too depleted in minerals for their taste)






- Original Message ----- 
From: "Sterling K. Webb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "'MexicoDoug'" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 
Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 8:34 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


> Martin Altmann said:
>
>> There were always wars, wars, wars...
>> funny enough, people now ranting about
>> the European Union always forget...
>
> 1337-1453 Hundred Years' War
> 1455-1485 Wars of the Roses
> 1496-1499 Russo-Swedish War of 1496-1499
> 1522-1559 Habsburg-Valois Wars
> 1554-1557 Russo-Swedish War of 1554-1557
> 1558-1583 Livonian War
> 1568-1648 Eighty Years' War
> 1590-1595 Russo-Swedish War of 1590-1595
> 1594-1603 Nine Years' War (Ireland)
> 1610-1617 Ingrian War
> 1618-1648 Thirty Years' War
> 1641-1649 Wars of Castro
> 1641-1653 Irish Confederate Wars
> 1642-1651 English Civil War
> 1644-1650 Scottish Civil War
> 1656-1658 Russo-Swedish War of 1656-1658
> 1667-1668 War of Devolution
> 1667-1683 Great Turkish War
> 1688-1691 Williamite War in Ireland
> 1700-1721 Great Northern War
> 1701-1713 War of the Spanish Succession
> 1733-1738 War of the Polish Succession
> 1739-1740 War of Jenkins' Ear
> 1740-1748 War of the Austrian Succession
> 1741-1743 Russo-Swedish War of 1741-1743
> 1756-1763 Seven Years' War
> 1788-1790 Russo-Swedish War of 1788-1790
> 17

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Sterling K. Webb
Martin Altmann said:

> There were always wars, wars, wars...
> funny enough, people now ranting about
> the European Union always forget...

1337-1453 Hundred Years' War
1455-1485 Wars of the Roses
1496-1499 Russo-Swedish War of 1496-1499
1522-1559 Habsburg-Valois Wars
1554-1557 Russo-Swedish War of 1554-1557
1558-1583 Livonian War
1568-1648 Eighty Years' War
1590-1595 Russo-Swedish War of 1590-1595
1594-1603 Nine Years' War (Ireland)
1610-1617 Ingrian War
1618-1648 Thirty Years' War
1641-1649 Wars of Castro
1641-1653 Irish Confederate Wars
1642-1651 English Civil War
1644-1650 Scottish Civil War
1656-1658 Russo-Swedish War of 1656-1658
1667-1668 War of Devolution
1667-1683 Great Turkish War
1688-1691 Williamite War in Ireland
1700-1721 Great Northern War
1701-1713 War of the Spanish Succession
1733-1738 War of the Polish Succession
1739-1740 War of Jenkins' Ear
1740-1748 War of the Austrian Succession
1741-1743 Russo-Swedish War of 1741-1743
1756-1763 Seven Years' War
1788-1790 Russo-Swedish War of 1788-1790
1789-1799 French Revolution
1798 Irish Rebellion of 1798
1792-1815 Napoleonic Wars
1808-1809 Finnish War
1848-1866 Italian Independence wars
1848-1849 First Italian Independence War
1859 Second Italian Independence War
1866 Third Italian Independence War
1854-1856 Crimean War
1866-1866 Austro-Prussian War
1870-1871 Franco-Prussian War
1877-1878 Russo-Turkish War
1893-1896 Cod War of 1893
1897 First Greco-Turkish War
1912-1913 Balkan Wars
1914-1918 World War I
1916 Easter Rising
1917-1920 Estonian Liberation War
1918-1919 Czechoslovakia-Hungary War
1918 Finnish Civil War
1918-1920 Russian Civil War
1919-1921 Irish War of Independence
1922-1923 Irish Civil War
1936-1939 Spanish Civil War
1939-1940 Winter War
1939-1945 World War II
1958 First Cod War
1972-1973 Second Cod War
1974 Turkish Invasion of Cyprus
1975-1976 Third Cod War
1994-1996 First Chechen War
1991 War in Slovenia
1991-1995 Croatian War of Independence
1992-1995 War in Bosnia and Herzegovina
1996-1999 Kosovo War
1999-present Second Chechen War
2001 Conflict in Macedonia
2001 Conflict in Southern Serbia

Only 63 wars in 500 years, or one every 7.94
years. Eleven wars in 33 years (1912-1945) is
probably a world record. Doesn't count wars
that Europeans participated in that didn't take
place IN Europe (otherwise the list would be
120, 150, or 200 wars long).

I feel totally abashed. The USA has only had
14 or 15 wars in 225 years, if you count our
War for Independency, John Adams' undeclared
naval war on France in 1798, two "wars" with
Barbary pirates, the Whiskey Rebellion (whiskey
lost, BTW), and all the wars we participated in
that were outside the United States. We've never
managed to have a war 100 years long or even
30 years long (although we seem to be trying to
do that in Iraq). And we've certainly never managed
to have a war as magnificently named as "The
War of Jenkins' Ear"! Now, that's how to name
a war! Clear, concise, and everybody knows
exactly what it's all about.


Sterling K. Webb

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Saturday, November 25, 2006 1:27 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hi Doug,

so flagrant is my commercialism not.
Yes, I do have a slice of Elbogen left for sale, but I guess, if you'd ask
Dieter Heinlein, you would pay 10$ less per gram.

For the spelling of uncle Alois I always find two variants:

"Widmanstätten"
(with a single "n" and the German letter for the diphthong, the "a" with the
2 dots above) or

"Beck-Widmannstetter".
Which one was more in use? I don't know. We have to ask the list-members
from Austria to look in the specific biographical lexika.

There still exists several descendants today, they spell themselves
"Beckh-Widmannstetter".

Ehm, Doug, the story with the font is different.
It's the most famous and incredible meteorite legend in history.

Be prepared!

There was a prophecy about the Burggraf-Klumpen.
It said, whenever it will be let down into the font of Loket castle,
it will come up again.

Well, so once it was let down in the font, and after a while, they tore him
out gain.

Spooky, isn't it Doug?

I forgot where I read that story and also why the chunk was hidden at which
opportunity.
Whether it was in the Napoleonic wars, or whether Wallenstein wanted to
found bullets out of it, whether some Hussites were hiding it...

There were always wars, wars, wars...funny enough, people now ranting about
the European Union always forget, in what for a privileged situation they're
living. 60 years without greater wars.

Buckleboo!
Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Moni Waiblinger-Seabridge
Thank you Martin and Doug

for all your efforts to let us know about certain literatures.
And I hope you two will meet some day, or have you?
I am sure you will enjoy each others company, you certainly make me smile 
when I read your posts to each other.

Happy Saturday,
Moni  :-)

PS. Just started to read Meteorites, Ice, and Antarctica,
after that  I will choose one of your choices.
Thanks!

_
Fixing up the home? Live Search can help 
http://imagine-windowslive.com/search/kits/default.aspx?kit=improve&locale=en-US&source=hmemailtaglinenov06&FORM=WLMTAG

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Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Martin Altmann
Hi Stefan,

aeiou-encyclopedia on the page of TU Graz says:

Widmanstätten (Beck-Widmannstetter), Alois von, b. Graz (Styria), July 12,
1754, d. Vienna, June 10, 1849, natural scientist. Inherited his family's
printing firm, (founded in Graz in 1585); director of the spinning-mill at
Pottendorf from 1804-1807; director of the Emperor Franz I's Cabinet for
Manufactured Goods (Fabriksproduktenkabinett) from 1807-1815.

I mean, that was still a time, where the spelling of names, wasn't fixed as
strictly as today. 

Google for: Beckh-Widmannstetter
And ask the persons, you'll get out with this name, how
great-great-...-great-grampa wrote his name.

Better we say Thompson structure...  eee...Thomson? 

Martyn Böckelbuh


-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von Stefan
Brandes
Gesendet: Samstag, 25. November 2006 20:49
An: Meteorite-list
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Alois von Widmanstätten  * 12. 7. 1754 Graz , ? 10. 6. 1849 Vienna

Greetings from Graz
Stefan




Hi Doug,

so flagrant is my commercialism not.
Yes, I do have a slice of Elbogen left for sale, but I guess, if you'd ask
Dieter Heinlein, you would pay 10$ less per gram.

For the spelling of uncle Alois I always find two variants:

"Widmanstätten"
(with a single "n" and the German letter for the diphthong, the "a" with the
2 dots above) or

"Beck-Widmannstetter".
Which one was more in use? I don't know. We have to ask the list-members
>from Austria to look in the specific biographical lexika.

There still exists several descendants today, they spell themselves
"Beckh-Widmannstetter".

Ehm, Doug, the story with the font is different.
It's the most famous and incredible meteorite legend in history.

Be prepared!

There was a prophecy about the Burggraf-Klumpen.
It said, whenever it will be let down into the font of Loket castle,
it will come up again.

Well, so once it was let down in the font, and after a while, they tore him
out gain.

Spooky, isn't it Doug?

I forgot where I read that story and also why the chunk was hidden at which
opportunity.
Whether it was in the Napoleonic wars, or whether Wallenstein wanted to
found bullets out of it, whether some Hussites were hiding it...

There were always wars, wars, wars...funny enough, people now ranting about
the European Union always forget, in what for a privileged situation they're
living. 60 years without greater wars.

Buckleboo!
Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
MexicoDoug
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 22:32
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

OK, Martin, Nice post, I'm convinced that, if I can ever possess a specimen
of Elbogen, I won't have any choice than to acquire it from one of Chladni's

authentic airs.:-)

You mentioned our Widmannstaetten: Alois Beck Edler von Widmannstetter

I was very curious about the spelling you used, an alternate from that which

we are accustomed...Can you tell us Teutonically challenged volks a little
about the reason for this difference?

Ahhh, and those kind and ever-so-considerate Frenchmen.  Why do you suppose
they would have mocked so cruelly their Bohemian hosts by spitefully lifting

up the unliftable Elbogen iron meteorite and tossing it into a well to
languish there for decades?  Was it simply with the arrogance to say, "Non,
nous'sommes non so greed, louky, devons-nous procéder à toss your
rrrevered Cloompain to zz bottom of z pit where he can hhhrrust avayoui
oui , ou la l, Kaput et Voilà  La Boheme!! "   No wonder the Austrians
taught those savage beastly French a lesson in humility and kicked them out
on their derrières shortly afterward... for which the French rewarded them
later by overrunning Munich.  Well being the Francophile I am, and still
astonished this could happen, I must say in their defense that the French
Secret Order of the Guardians of Ensisheim has brought back great honor and
civility upon their countrymen after that fateful moment of the aggression
of Elbogen...

Best wishes,
Doug

PS nice post Matthias, too!

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 2:42 PM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyw

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Stefan Brandes
Alois von Widmanstätten  * 12. 7. 1754 Graz , ? 10. 6. 1849 Vienna

Greetings from Graz
Stefan




Hi Doug,

so flagrant is my commercialism not.
Yes, I do have a slice of Elbogen left for sale, but I guess, if you'd ask
Dieter Heinlein, you would pay 10$ less per gram.

For the spelling of uncle Alois I always find two variants:

"Widmanstätten"
(with a single "n" and the German letter for the diphthong, the "a" with the
2 dots above) or

"Beck-Widmannstetter".
Which one was more in use? I don't know. We have to ask the list-members
>from Austria to look in the specific biographical lexika.

There still exists several descendants today, they spell themselves
"Beckh-Widmannstetter".

Ehm, Doug, the story with the font is different.
It's the most famous and incredible meteorite legend in history.

Be prepared!

There was a prophecy about the Burggraf-Klumpen.
It said, whenever it will be let down into the font of Loket castle,
it will come up again.

Well, so once it was let down in the font, and after a while, they tore him
out gain.

Spooky, isn't it Doug?

I forgot where I read that story and also why the chunk was hidden at which
opportunity.
Whether it was in the Napoleonic wars, or whether Wallenstein wanted to
found bullets out of it, whether some Hussites were hiding it...

There were always wars, wars, wars...funny enough, people now ranting about
the European Union always forget, in what for a privileged situation they're
living. 60 years without greater wars.

Buckleboo!
Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
MexicoDoug
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 22:32
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

OK, Martin, Nice post, I'm convinced that, if I can ever possess a specimen
of Elbogen, I won't have any choice than to acquire it from one of Chladni's

authentic airs.:-)

You mentioned our Widmannstaetten: Alois Beck Edler von Widmannstetter

I was very curious about the spelling you used, an alternate from that which

we are accustomed...Can you tell us Teutonically challenged volks a little
about the reason for this difference?

Ahhh, and those kind and ever-so-considerate Frenchmen.  Why do you suppose
they would have mocked so cruelly their Bohemian hosts by spitefully lifting

up the unliftable Elbogen iron meteorite and tossing it into a well to
languish there for decades?  Was it simply with the arrogance to say, "Non,
nous'sommes non so greed, louky, devons-nous procéder à toss your
rrrevered Cloompain to zz bottom of z pit where he can hhhrrust avayoui
oui , ou la l, Kaput et Voilà  La Boheme!! "   No wonder the Austrians
taught those savage beastly French a lesson in humility and kicked them out
on their derrières shortly afterward... for which the French rewarded them
later by overrunning Munich.  Well being the Francophile I am, and still
astonished this could happen, I must say in their defense that the French
Secret Order of the Guardians of Ensisheim has brought back great honor and
civility upon their countrymen after that fateful moment of the aggression
of Elbogen...

Best wishes,
Doug

PS nice post Matthias, too!

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 2:42 PM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyway, when ha was young and visited the stone of Ensisheim in the church,
he made pubertal fooling about the people being so superstitious.

Again, if once Vassiliev won't be so busy anymore, he has to found a
meteorite fair on Loket castle. Nice counterpart to Ensisheim.

Huh, I think I'm a capital sinner, I don't think, that I would be able to
lift a Klumpen of more than 2 hundredweights...

At least in the stories (there exist another version of the Burggraf
metamorphosis) there are some slight meteoritical appeals: Thunder, Sounds,
light, a pit...

Buckleboo!
Martin

PS: There must be another story from that Klumpen, that it was hidden in the
font of the castle - perhaps during the Napoleonic wars?



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: MexicoDoug [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 20:08
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Martin,

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-25 Thread Martin Altmann
Hi Doug,

so flagrant is my commercialism not.
Yes, I do have a slice of Elbogen left for sale, but I guess, if you'd ask
Dieter Heinlein, you would pay 10$ less per gram.

For the spelling of uncle Alois I always find two variants:

"Widmanstätten"   
(with a single "n" and the German letter for the diphthong, the "a" with the
2 dots above) or

"Beck-Widmannstetter".
Which one was more in use? I don't know. We have to ask the list-members
from Austria to look in the specific biographical lexika.

There still exists several descendants today, they spell themselves 
"Beckh-Widmannstetter".

Ehm, Doug, the story with the font is different.
It's the most famous and incredible meteorite legend in history.

Be prepared!

There was a prophecy about the Burggraf-Klumpen.
It said, whenever it will be let down into the font of Loket castle,
it will come up again.

Well, so once it was let down in the font, and after a while, they tore him
out gain.

Spooky, isn't it Doug?

I forgot where I read that story and also why the chunk was hidden at which
opportunity.
Whether it was in the Napoleonic wars, or whether Wallenstein wanted to
found bullets out of it, whether some Hussites were hiding it...

There were always wars, wars, wars...funny enough, people now ranting about
the European Union always forget, in what for a privileged situation they're
living. 60 years without greater wars.

Buckleboo!
Martin

-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Im Auftrag von
MexicoDoug
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 22:32
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

OK, Martin, Nice post, I'm convinced that, if I can ever possess a specimen 
of Elbogen, I won't have any choice than to acquire it from one of Chladni's

authentic airs.:-)

You mentioned our Widmannstaetten: Alois Beck Edler von Widmannstetter

I was very curious about the spelling you used, an alternate from that which

we are accustomed...Can you tell us Teutonically challenged volks a little 
about the reason for this difference?

Ahhh, and those kind and ever-so-considerate Frenchmen.  Why do you suppose 
they would have mocked so cruelly their Bohemian hosts by spitefully lifting

up the unliftable Elbogen iron meteorite and tossing it into a well to 
languish there for decades?  Was it simply with the arrogance to say, "Non, 
nous'sommes non so greed, louky, devons-nous procéder à toss your 
rrrevered Cloompain to zz bottom of z pit where he can hhhrrust avayoui 
oui , ou la l, Kaput et Voilà  La Boheme!! "   No wonder the Austrians 
taught those savage beastly French a lesson in humility and kicked them out 
on their derrières shortly afterward... for which the French rewarded them 
later by overrunning Munich.  Well being the Francophile I am, and still 
astonished this could happen, I must say in their defense that the French 
Secret Order of the Guardians of Ensisheim has brought back great honor and 
civility upon their countrymen after that fateful moment of the aggression 
of Elbogen...

Best wishes,
Doug

PS nice post Matthias, too!

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 2:42 PM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyway, when ha was young and visited the stone of Ensisheim in the church,
he made pubertal fooling about the people being so superstitious.

Again, if once Vassiliev won't be so busy anymore, he has to found a
meteorite fair on Loket castle. Nice counterpart to Ensisheim.

Huh, I think I'm a capital sinner, I don't think, that I would be able to
lift a Klumpen of more than 2 hundredweights...

At least in the stories (there exist another version of the Burggraf
metamorphosis) there are some slight meteoritical appeals: Thunder, Sounds,
light, a pit...

Buckleboo!
Martin

PS: There must be another story from that Klumpen, that it was hidden in the
font of the castle - perhaps during the Napoleonic wars?



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: MexicoDoug [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 20:08
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Martin,

Thanks for the Buckleboo!  It had become such a familiar part of the list,
like an at

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-24 Thread MexicoDoug
OK, Martin, Nice post, I'm convinced that, if I can ever possess a specimen 
of Elbogen, I won't have any choice than to acquire it from one of Chladni's 
authentic airs.:-)

You mentioned our Widmannstaetten: Alois Beck Edler von Widmannstetter

I was very curious about the spelling you used, an alternate from that which 
we are accustomed...Can you tell us Teutonically challenged volks a little 
about the reason for this difference?

Ahhh, and those kind and ever-so-considerate Frenchmen.  Why do you suppose 
they would have mocked so cruelly their Bohemian hosts by spitefully lifting 
up the unliftable Elbogen iron meteorite and tossing it into a well to 
languish there for decades?  Was it simply with the arrogance to say, "Non, 
nous'sommes non so greed, louky, devons-nous procéder à toss your 
rrrevered Cloompain to zz bottom of z pit where he can hhhrrust avayoui 
oui , ou la l, Kaput et Voilà  La Boheme!! "   No wonder the Austrians 
taught those savage beastly French a lesson in humility and kicked them out 
on their derrières shortly afterward... for which the French rewarded them 
later by overrunning Munich.  Well being the Francophile I am, and still 
astonished this could happen, I must say in their defense that the French 
Secret Order of the Guardians of Ensisheim has brought back great honor and 
civility upon their countrymen after that fateful moment of the aggression 
of Elbogen...

Best wishes,
Doug

PS nice post Matthias, too!

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 2:42 PM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyway, when ha was young and visited the stone of Ensisheim in the church,
he made pubertal fooling about the people being so superstitious.

Again, if once Vassiliev won't be so busy anymore, he has to found a
meteorite fair on Loket castle. Nice counterpart to Ensisheim.

Huh, I think I'm a capital sinner, I don't think, that I would be able to
lift a Klumpen of more than 2 hundredweights...

At least in the stories (there exist another version of the Burggraf
metamorphosis) there are some slight meteoritical appeals: Thunder, Sounds,
light, a pit...

Buckleboo!
Martin

PS: There must be another story from that Klumpen, that it was hidden in the
font of the castle - perhaps during the Napoleonic wars?



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: MexicoDoug [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 20:08
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Martin,

Thanks for the Buckleboo!  It had become such a familiar part of the list,
like an attention-getting favorite family member I started to miss it

Now, whoever said German couldn't be a consonant language, hasn't read
enough of "Klumpen klingenden Metall" and such.  Those Grimm boys really
provided a capsule of time, the scientists they were, so far ahead in
educating toddling future meteoriticists.  Thanks for the tale of the
Bohemian iron Elbogen, the year assumed ca. 1400 witnessed fall that was
recorded more as conversion of a greedy baron than a meteoritical tale.  One

wonders what Widmaenstatten was really out to discover when he stuck a slab
of Elbogen in a Bunsen Burner to see what would happen. It must have been
quite a BuckleBOO! for Widmaenstatten to see the steely Baron's jailbars and

bones developing in the flame of that bewitching Klumpen of Metall.  This
relationship of meteorites to avariciousness and piousness illustrated here
and in the Grimms' tale is pleasantly enlightening.

One can see the original view of the of the Burggraf that Widmanstaetten saw

courtesy of Jörn Koblitz here:
http://www.metbase.de/printable/images/schreibers3_650.jpg

And Chladni himself had an etched knife forged from Elbogen which is now at
the Berlin Museum for any or all the motivated to see!
http://euromin.w3sites.net/Nouveau_site/musees/berlin/Website-dt/Elbogen.htm
l

And another book to possibly add to the list:

KNAGSTED by Gustev Wied
Finally, here's another book you don't have to buy and can read online,
Knagsted, by the Danish novelist Gustav Wied.  That is, if you can at least
read Rigsdansk... It was a satire published in 1902 and is based in part on
the Elbogen legends...
Excerpt: **"Samt (hvad der er forbavsende interessant): "Der verwünschte
Bur

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-24 Thread Matthias Bärmann
Dear Martin, Doug, list , -

Goethe celebrated his 74th birthday 1823 at the castle of Elbogen (Loket), 
together with the 19 years young Ulrike von Levetzow (see Goethe's 
'Marienbader Elegie'). So he didn't care so much about the meteorite, 
prefered to ask  Ulrike to marry him - but she refused. Probably it would 
have been better to turn the eyes to eternity and to start collecting 
meteorites. But, well, you know ...

All best, have a nice weekend - Matthias

- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 8:42 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyway, when ha was young and visited the stone of Ensisheim in the church,
he made pubertal fooling about the people being so superstitious.

Again, if once Vassiliev won't be so busy anymore, he has to found a
meteorite fair on Loket castle. Nice counterpart to Ensisheim.

Huh, I think I'm a capital sinner, I don't think, that I would be able to
lift a Klumpen of more than 2 hundredweights...

At least in the stories (there exist another version of the Burggraf
metamorphosis) there are some slight meteoritical appeals: Thunder, Sounds,
light, a pit...

Buckleboo!
Martin

PS: There must be another story from that Klumpen, that it was hidden in the
font of the castle - perhaps during the Napoleonic wars?



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: MexicoDoug [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 20:08
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Martin,

Thanks for the Buckleboo!  It had become such a familiar part of the list,
like an attention-getting favorite family member I started to miss it

Now, whoever said German couldn't be a consonant language, hasn't read
enough of "Klumpen klingenden Metall" and such.  Those Grimm boys really
provided a capsule of time, the scientists they were, so far ahead in
educating toddling future meteoriticists.  Thanks for the tale of the
Bohemian iron Elbogen, the year assumed ca. 1400 witnessed fall that was
recorded more as conversion of a greedy baron than a meteoritical tale.  One

wonders what Widmaenstatten was really out to discover when he stuck a slab
of Elbogen in a Bunsen Burner to see what would happen. It must have been
quite a BuckleBOO! for Widmaenstatten to see the steely Baron's jailbars and

bones developing in the flame of that bewitching Klumpen of Metall.  This
relationship of meteorites to avariciousness and piousness illustrated here
and in the Grimms' tale is pleasantly enlightening.

One can see the original view of the of the Burggraf that Widmanstaetten saw

courtesy of Jörn Koblitz here:
http://www.metbase.de/printable/images/schreibers3_650.jpg

And Chladni himself had an etched knife forged from Elbogen which is now at
the Berlin Museum for any or all the motivated to see!
http://euromin.w3sites.net/Nouveau_site/musees/berlin/Website-dt/Elbogen.htm
l

And another book to possibly add to the list:

KNAGSTED by Gustev Wied
Finally, here's another book you don't have to buy and can read online,
Knagsted, by the Danish novelist Gustav Wied.  That is, if you can at least
read Rigsdansk... It was a satire published in 1902 and is based in part on
the Elbogen legends...
Excerpt: **"Samt (hvad der er forbavsende interessant): "Der verwünschte
Burggraf" (en ond og haard Borgherre, der "in grauer Vorzeit" paa
Foranledning af sin Umenneskelighed og en fattig Kones indtrængende Bøn til
Gud blev forvandlet til) "ein ursprünglich 108 kg schwerer Meteorstein von
der Gestalt eines Pferdekopfes. Gegenwürtig aber ist nur der kleinere etwa
22 kg schwere Theil desselben zu sehen, während sich der grÖssere im k. k.
Hof-Naturaliencabinet in Wien befindet" ...**

complete Danish text (Lars, please help!):
http://www.bjornetjenesten.dk/teksterdk/knagsted.htm

Marty, You've really earned your Austral-Germaniac heiritage today...
Congratulations !!!

Notice of my special request is kindly appreciated,
Buckleboo too,
Dougy


- Original Message ----- 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>;

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 4:43 AM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hi Doug,

apropos Grimm bros.
Did you know, that they mentioned a very famous meteorit

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-24 Thread Martin Altmann
Hola Doug,

yah and the Grimm brothers weren't only collectors of tales, but titans of
linguistics in writing the first modern comprehensive German dictionary.

Btw. Widmannstetter used Elbogen for his direct printing of his famous
Thopmson structures.

Goethe celebrated his 75th birthday on the castle of Elbogen (Loket), I'm
not sure, whether he saw the Klumpen still there.
Anyway, when ha was young and visited the stone of Ensisheim in the church,
he made pubertal fooling about the people being so superstitious.

Again, if once Vassiliev won't be so busy anymore, he has to found a
meteorite fair on Loket castle. Nice counterpart to Ensisheim.

Huh, I think I'm a capital sinner, I don't think, that I would be able to
lift a Klumpen of more than 2 hundredweights...

At least in the stories (there exist another version of the Burggraf
metamorphosis) there are some slight meteoritical appeals: Thunder, Sounds,
light, a pit...

Buckleboo!
Martin

PS: There must be another story from that Klumpen, that it was hidden in the
font of the castle - perhaps during the Napoleonic wars?



-Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
Von: MexicoDoug [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Gesendet: Freitag, 24. November 2006 20:08
An: Martin Altmann
Cc: meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

Hi Martin,

Thanks for the Buckleboo!  It had become such a familiar part of the list, 
like an attention-getting favorite family member I started to miss it

Now, whoever said German couldn't be a consonant language, hasn't read 
enough of "Klumpen klingenden Metall" and such.  Those Grimm boys really 
provided a capsule of time, the scientists they were, so far ahead in 
educating toddling future meteoriticists.  Thanks for the tale of the 
Bohemian iron Elbogen, the year assumed ca. 1400 witnessed fall that was 
recorded more as conversion of a greedy baron than a meteoritical tale.  One

wonders what Widmaenstatten was really out to discover when he stuck a slab 
of Elbogen in a Bunsen Burner to see what would happen. It must have been 
quite a BuckleBOO! for Widmaenstatten to see the steely Baron's jailbars and

bones developing in the flame of that bewitching Klumpen of Metall.  This 
relationship of meteorites to avariciousness and piousness illustrated here 
and in the Grimms' tale is pleasantly enlightening.

One can see the original view of the of the Burggraf that Widmanstaetten saw

courtesy of Jörn Koblitz here:
http://www.metbase.de/printable/images/schreibers3_650.jpg

And Chladni himself had an etched knife forged from Elbogen which is now at 
the Berlin Museum for any or all the motivated to see!
http://euromin.w3sites.net/Nouveau_site/musees/berlin/Website-dt/Elbogen.htm
l

And another book to possibly add to the list:

KNAGSTED by Gustev Wied
Finally, here's another book you don't have to buy and can read online, 
Knagsted, by the Danish novelist Gustav Wied.  That is, if you can at least 
read Rigsdansk... It was a satire published in 1902 and is based in part on 
the Elbogen legends...
Excerpt: **"Samt (hvad der er forbavsende interessant): "Der verwünschte 
Burggraf" (en ond og haard Borgherre, der "in grauer Vorzeit" paa 
Foranledning af sin Umenneskelighed og en fattig Kones indtrængende Bøn til 
Gud blev forvandlet til) "ein ursprünglich 108 kg schwerer Meteorstein von 
der Gestalt eines Pferdekopfes. Gegenwürtig aber ist nur der kleinere etwa 
22 kg schwere Theil desselben zu sehen, während sich der grÖssere im k. k. 
Hof-Naturaliencabinet in Wien befindet" ...**

complete Danish text (Lars, please help!):
http://www.bjornetjenesten.dk/teksterdk/knagsted.htm

Marty, You've really earned your Austral-Germaniac heiritage today... 
Congratulations !!!

Notice of my special request is kindly appreciated,
Buckleboo too,
Dougy


- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 4:43 AM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hi Doug,

apropos Grimm bros.
Did you know, that they mentioned a very famous meteorite in their
collection of German folk tales (1816-1818)?

"Auch zeigt man auf dem Rathause zu Elbogen noch jetzt die verbannten
ruchlosen und goldgeizigen Burggrafen in einem Klumpen klingenden Metall.
Der Sage nach soll niemand, der mit einer Todsünde befleckt ist, diesen
Klumpen in die Höhe heben können."

Uuuh my poor English, a Matteo version could read like this:

"Also, in the townhall of Elbogen still today the banned heinous and
gold-greedy burgraves are exhibited in a lump of clinking metal.
Acording to legend nobody, who's imbrued by a capital sin, will be able to
lift this lump."

To translate the tale of the metamorphosis of the Burgrave into the
meteorite, I leave to others (

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-24 Thread MexicoDoug
Hi Martin,

Thanks for the Buckleboo!  It had become such a familiar part of the list, 
like an attention-getting favorite family member I started to miss it

Now, whoever said German couldn't be a consonant language, hasn't read 
enough of "Klumpen klingenden Metall" and such.  Those Grimm boys really 
provided a capsule of time, the scientists they were, so far ahead in 
educating toddling future meteoriticists.  Thanks for the tale of the 
Bohemian iron Elbogen, the year assumed ca. 1400 witnessed fall that was 
recorded more as conversion of a greedy baron than a meteoritical tale.  One 
wonders what Widmaenstatten was really out to discover when he stuck a slab 
of Elbogen in a Bunsen Burner to see what would happen. It must have been 
quite a BuckleBOO! for Widmaenstatten to see the steely Baron's jailbars and 
bones developing in the flame of that bewitching Klumpen of Metall.  This 
relationship of meteorites to avariciousness and piousness illustrated here 
and in the Grimms' tale is pleasantly enlightening.

One can see the original view of the of the Burggraf that Widmanstaetten saw 
courtesy of Jörn Koblitz here:
http://www.metbase.de/printable/images/schreibers3_650.jpg

And Chladni himself had an etched knife forged from Elbogen which is now at 
the Berlin Museum for any or all the motivated to see!
http://euromin.w3sites.net/Nouveau_site/musees/berlin/Website-dt/Elbogen.html

And another book to possibly add to the list:

KNAGSTED by Gustev Wied
Finally, here's another book you don't have to buy and can read online, 
Knagsted, by the Danish novelist Gustav Wied.  That is, if you can at least 
read Rigsdansk... It was a satire published in 1902 and is based in part on 
the Elbogen legends...
Excerpt: **"Samt (hvad der er forbavsende interessant): "Der verwünschte 
Burggraf" (en ond og haard Borgherre, der "in grauer Vorzeit" paa 
Foranledning af sin Umenneskelighed og en fattig Kones indtrængende Bøn til 
Gud blev forvandlet til) "ein ursprünglich 108 kg schwerer Meteorstein von 
der Gestalt eines Pferdekopfes. Gegenwürtig aber ist nur der kleinere etwa 
22 kg schwere Theil desselben zu sehen, während sich der grÖssere im k. k. 
Hof-Naturaliencabinet in Wien befindet" ...**

complete Danish text (Lars, please help!):
http://www.bjornetjenesten.dk/teksterdk/knagsted.htm

Marty, You've really earned your Austral-Germaniac heiritage today... 
Congratulations !!!

Notice of my special request is kindly appreciated,
Buckleboo too,
Dougy


- Original Message - 
From: "Martin Altmann" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "'MexicoDoug'" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 

Sent: Friday, November 24, 2006 4:43 AM
Subject: AW: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II


Hi Doug,

apropos Grimm bros.
Did you know, that they mentioned a very famous meteorite in their
collection of German folk tales (1816-1818)?

"Auch zeigt man auf dem Rathause zu Elbogen noch jetzt die verbannten
ruchlosen und goldgeizigen Burggrafen in einem Klumpen klingenden Metall.
Der Sage nach soll niemand, der mit einer Todsünde befleckt ist, diesen
Klumpen in die Höhe heben können."

Uuuh my poor English, a Matteo version could read like this:

"Also, in the townhall of Elbogen still today the banned heinous and
gold-greedy burgraves are exhibited in a lump of clinking metal.
Acording to legend nobody, who's imbrued by a capital sin, will be able to
lift this lump."

To translate the tale of the metamorphosis of the Burgrave into the
meteorite, I leave to others (Peter, Bernd?):

Der verwunschene Markgraf von Elbogen

In grauer Vorzeit herrschte über Elbogen ein gar harter Mann, der
Markgraf von Vohburg, der seine Untertanen und Diener, besonders die
Bewohner der Robitsch - einer Elbogener Gegend - mit schwerem Frondienst
bedrückte. Konnte einer den Willen des strengen Herren nicht nachkommen,
wurde er sicherlich in den Turm geworfen und jämmerlich gezüchtigt. Über dem
Haupttor der Burg ließ er eine Glocke befestigen, welche zur harten Arbeit
rief. Zu Anfang ertönte sie wohl selten, später aber immer häufiger; denn
der Markgraf wurde immer grausamer und habsüchtiger, das Mitleid schien
gänzlich von ihm gewichen zu sein.
Eines Sonntagmorgens stand er über dem Tor und beobachtete die in
das nahe Gotteshaus wandelnden Scharen. Und es traf sich, dass eine arme
Witwe ihm an diesem Tag eine Zahlung zu leisten hatte, sie hatte aber
nichts, dass sie diese hätte entrichten können. Vielleicht, dachte sie,
stimmt die heilige Sonntagsfeier den strengen Gebieter etwas zum Mitleid,
und ging mit ihren unmündigen Kindern an der Hand, zu ihm hin und bat
flehend um Nachsicht und Barmherzigkeit. "Habet Erbarmen mit mir! Der
Ernährer der Familie ist gestorben und die Arbeit meiner Hände reicht eben
nur kümmerlich hin, mich und diese Waisen zu erhalten!"
Das Angesicht des Markgrafe

Re: [meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-24 Thread Martin Altmann
Hi Doug,

apropos Grimm bros.
Did you know, that they mentioned a very famous meteorite in their
collection of German folk tales (1816-1818)?

"Auch zeigt man auf dem Rathause zu Elbogen noch jetzt die verbannten
ruchlosen und goldgeizigen Burggrafen in einem Klumpen klingenden Metall.
Der Sage nach soll niemand, der mit einer Todsünde befleckt ist, diesen
Klumpen in die Höhe heben können."

Uuuh my poor English, a Matteo version could read like this:

"Also, in the townhall of Elbogen still today the banned heinous and
gold-greedy burgraves are exhibited in a lump of clinking metal.
Acording to legend nobody, who's imbrued by a capital sin, will be able to
lift this lump."

To translate the tale of the metamorphosis of the Burgrave into the
meteorite, I leave to others (Peter, Bernd?):

Der verwunschene Markgraf von Elbogen 

In grauer Vorzeit herrschte über Elbogen ein gar harter Mann, der
Markgraf von Vohburg, der seine Untertanen und Diener, besonders die
Bewohner der Robitsch – einer Elbogener Gegend – mit schwerem Frondienst
bedrückte. Konnte einer den Willen des strengen Herren nicht nachkommen,
wurde er sicherlich in den Turm geworfen und jämmerlich gezüchtigt. Über dem
Haupttor der Burg ließ er eine Glocke befestigen, welche zur harten Arbeit
rief. Zu Anfang ertönte sie wohl selten, später aber immer häufiger; denn
der Markgraf wurde immer grausamer und habsüchtiger, das Mitleid schien
gänzlich von ihm gewichen zu sein.
Eines Sonntagmorgens stand er über dem Tor und beobachtete die in
das nahe Gotteshaus wandelnden Scharen. Und es traf sich, dass eine arme
Witwe ihm an diesem Tag eine Zahlung zu leisten hatte, sie hatte aber
nichts, dass sie diese hätte entrichten können. Vielleicht, dachte sie,
stimmt die heilige Sonntagsfeier den strengen Gebieter etwas zum Mitleid,
und ging mit ihren unmündigen Kindern an der Hand, zu ihm hin und bat
flehend um Nachsicht und Barmherzigkeit. „Habet Erbarmen mit mir! Der
Ernährer der Familie ist gestorben und die Arbeit meiner Hände reicht eben
nur kümmerlich hin, mich und diese Waisen zu erhalten!“
Das Angesicht des Markgrafen verfinsterte sich bei der Rede wie der
Himmel, der sich eben mit schweren Gewitterwolken umzog. Die arme Witwe bat
nochmals und auch die Kleinen erhoben zu ihm ihre Hände. Doch das Herz des
Herren blieb unbewegt und ließ sich durch den Jammer dieser Armen nicht
erweichen. Zornesglut erfüllte sein Antlitz und seine Stimme donnerte auf
sie herab: „Hinweg aus meinen Augen! Zahle was Du schuldig bist, sonnst
lasse ich Dich in den Turm werfen!“ Da raffte sich das Weib empor und rief,
während das Donnern durch das Tal dröhnte, dem Fühllosen zu: „Weh` Dir,
Vohburg! In dieser Stunde noch wirst Du in Stein verwandelt werden“.
Ein Schrei scholl durch die Lüfte – der Markgraf war verschwunden
und dort, vor er stand, lag ein Klumpen – der verwunschene Markgraf von
Elbogen. 

from
Stanilav Burachovic: Sagen der Karlsbader Landschaft


Martin, on your special request: Buckleboo!




---
STAR MONEY by the Bros. Altmann (jeje)
A short fable summarized by our very favorite Germans, based on the original

which was probably much older than the 1803 L'Aigle fall itself.  Gives 
great insight to cultural fantasies of the significance of meteorites in the

deep recesses of human thought.  Interestingly, in an odd twist, it 
personifies what we all yearn in meteorite hunting in one form or 
another...READ THE ENGLISH translation free here, no need to buy the book, 
compiled by the namsake of Chladni's heirs:  Story featured in Nation 
Geographic:

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/grimm/star_money2.html

Best wishes, Doug





__
Meteorite-list mailing list
Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/meteorite-list


[meteorite-list] Meteorite novels -gifts II

2006-11-23 Thread MexicoDoug
Hello Listees, again,

...today, I imagine several cheering their Cheshire grins and feeding their 
fattened guts...sitting on the sofa and still smacking the lips like the cat 
that swallowed little Tweety...

Right or wrong, it's said there's something fulfilling for the man that can 
do three things before he dies: Have a Son, Write a book, and Plant a 
tree...(wheew - lot of work left to do)  I'm sure I've missed more books 
than I've listed  which are fictional novels relating somehow to meteorites, 
but here are two more (the second one is an online ditty) written by list 
member which have special reasons not to be left out,

ADVENTURES OF DIANA: THE UNDERWORLD by Jim Balister
Popular Action book off the presses recently which follows a plain-Jane girl 
named Diana loses her job, and while looking for a new one meets the love of 
her life, David, who happens to be a meteorite collector, among other 
things.  At one point they spot a fireball and try to recover it.  One day, 
in this sweet midwestern American boredom, the Earth takes a turn 
unexpectedly and quake hits, followed by every extraterrestrial, 
governmental plague and monsterous vermin that can be thrown at its 
inhabitants, including Diana.  With the help of a geologist, Diana goes down 
a pit where they find a flying saucer that kidnaps them, one mishap and 
incredible recovery takes place after another, the upper and lower worlds, 
with almost all their monsters and creatures facing destruction.  But then 
Diana meets someone important and she yearns to reestablish her life and 
settle down with David...

STAR MONEY by the Bros. Altmann (jeje)
A short fable summarized by our very favorite Germans, based on the original 
which was probably much older than the 1803 L'Aigle fall itself.  Gives 
great insight to cultural fantasies of the significance of meteorites in the 
deep recesses of human thought.  Interestingly, in an odd twist, it 
personifies what we all yearn in meteorite hunting in one form or 
another...READ THE ENGLISH translation free here, no need to buy the book, 
compiled by the namsake of Chladni's heirs:  Story featured in Nation 
Geographic:

http://www.nationalgeographic.com/grimm/star_money2.html

Best wishes, Doug




- Original Message - 
From: "MexicoDoug" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: 
Sent: Thursday, November 23, 2006 4:30 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] List of Meteorite novels for gifts


> Hola Listees,
>
> Thanks very kindly for the meteorite fictional book ideas many of you 
> kindly
> sent in response to my post the other day.
>
> I thought I would post a summary in case anyone else was looking for gift
> ideas for friends family or loved ones.
>
> First, I'll tell you the book I decided to get for a special person (just
> received today!!!), followed by a list of other books (for which I owe
> thanks to everyone who helped me out on and off list):
>
> Winner:  STARDUST, (Spanish Title: Lluvia de Estrellas = Meteor Shower-) 
> by
> Neil Gaiman
> This is a romantic fantasy about the faeries and struck ones in the nicest
> sense.  While it seems like it is written for children, the naughty author
> has the meteorite curse after her painful atmospheric entry, and there is 
> a
> bit of steamy sex to whet some folks appetites... Two cultures somewhere 
> in
> the English countryside are divided by a wall every day except one in 9
> years.  An adventurous young man with an interesting birthright is with 
> the
> prettiest girl in the nondescript human village inside the stone wall.
> Victoria owns his heart, but, she doesn't care much for Tristran.  They 
> gaze
> into the sky when witnessing the ground shaking and thunder accompanying a
> shooting star.  It begins as a small light, but quickly outshines the Moon
> and brilliantly falls somewhere on the other side of the wall, where there
> are enchanted meadows, trees and their inhabitants.  The young man 
> Tristran
> is so blinded by love that he somehow becomes obsessed with the labor to
> recover the fallen star and bring it to her to win her heart and live
> happily ever after.
>
> Only, he has lots of competition hunting on the other side of the wall ...
> where meteorites have more voluptuous properties than a few quartzy
> chondrules. Tristran learns that recovering a shooting star is very 
> arduous
> task which forces one to meet and deal with all sorts of challenging
> characters during the quest.  Finally he learns that the fallen star is
> nothing his imagination contemplated, but that the knowledge he has
> accumulated in his quest for it has changed his life and taught him more
> about himself than he dreamed were possible to know.
>
> The tale is fairly short in medium print, and I've skimmed it enough to
> highly recommend it to the Romantics, hopeless, and hopeful.
>
> Runner ups,
>
> THE ICE LIMIT (Mas Alla del Hielo) by Douglas Preston and Lincoln Child
> Popular novel, A rich meteorite collector decides to pillage Chile by 
> hiring
> a crew