Hello Darren and list,

I think it is a good read, and as you noted, it is (usually) one of the cheaper meteorite books. The following might help you decide if the book may be of interest to you.

Clear Skies,
Mark Bostick
Wichita, Kansas
www.meteoritearticles.com


"Stones From The Stars: The Unsolved Mysteries of Meteorites " by Thedore R. LeMaire. Hardcover, 185 pgs, (c) February 1980, Theodore Rogers LeMaire.

Chapters include: 1. Lost City, Oklahoma, 2. The Canadian Fireball Procession of 1913, 3. Cosmic Timetables, 4. Sociable Stones and Sky Irons, 5. Drop Zones, 6. Iron Alley, 7. Oregon's Phantom Meteorite, 8. The Kansas Collection, 9. The Hermit Kings, 10. Explosion Craters, 11. A Cosmic Geometry, 12. Outlaw Asteroids, Conclusion: The Siberian Fix, Bibliography, Index.

Photos include: Norton 2000lb+ Meteorite Main Mass, Kirin City 3900lb. Meteorite (aka Jilin), The Willamette Meteorite, Hunting for the Port Oxford Meteorite, Ahnighnito in Greenland, Moving Ahnighnito, The Hoba West Meteorite, Barringer (or Meteor) Crater, Henbury Crater, and more.

From Dust jacket: "In the 18th century, French scientists denied that stones
could possibly fall from the sky. Yet modern science still tries to ignore meteorites baffling behavior. They defy the laws of physics by slowing down, speeding up, even making 180 degree course changes, and instead of landing randomly about the globe they favor certain drop zones. Appalachia, Kansas, and the narrow "Iron alley" of America's West Coast have received repeated bombardments over the centuries, and other regions none at all. For nearly five years. T.R. LemMaire re-examined astronomical journals, searched explorers accounts, and correlated the scientific literature on meteors to reveal a plethora of startling anomalies. Why do "Sociable Stone" meteorites usually fall near human habitation, while "Shy Irons" decent in remote desert regions?. when modern experts find it hard to spot authentic meteorites, how did the world's "primitive" cultures so easily identify "stones from heave that fell centuries before? Still more puzzling are the precise geometries that meteorite sites reveal impact craters here and on the moon are not always round, as ballistic theory might predict, but often square or hexagonal! On a map, craters often align themselves along exact rectangles stretching hundred, even thousands of miles. And "natural" formations like Hudson Bay are now suspected to be vast star-wounds formed millions of years ago. As speculative and adventurous as Chariots of the Gods?, as richly documented as The Bermuda Triangle, STONES FROM THE STARS is a riveting work of fact that serves up dozens of genuine cosmic mysteries - and one single, unthinkable conclusion."


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