Happy Birthday!
On this day in history:
Fall, May 12, 1861
Butsura H6

Professor Maskelyne's meteoritic poetry (1863):

AEROLITICS

The branch of science that treats meteorites has acquired sufficient importance 
to justify our giving it a special name, and I therefore propose for its 
denomination with which this article is headed.  Many reasons conspire to 
render this study of "Aerolitics" one of increasing interest, and to make it 
highly desirable that collections of meteorites should exist to illustrate it, 
as complete as possible, not only in the numbers of the different falls they 
represent, but also as regards the modes in which the specimens are prepared 
for exhibition.  These remarkable bodies will always command a general 
interest, from the fact that in them we see matter foreign in its origin and 
history to our own world, and handle, in them, the only tangible substances 
that belong to the space beyond our atmosphere. ...

Best wishes,
Doug
PS  I'd like a Butsura specimen, please so don't be shy if you have one.  This 
Indian meteorite was reported to have had 5 pieces fall at distances of up to 
several miles apart, yet all fit together with essentially minimal to no crust  
on the interlocking surfaces.


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