PECK ELLIS (1979) The Fate of a Kansas Meteorite
Crater (Sky & Telescope, August 1979, pp. 126-128):

The rich farmland of Kiowa County, Kansas, is devoid of normal stones, but lots 
of odd,
heavy ones dotted it when homesteaders arrived there in the 1870's. Some of 
these strange
looking rocks were used to hold down rain-barrel covers, to anchor dugout 
roofs, or to plug
fence holes.
The first person to recognize these as meteorites was Eliza Kimberly, who moved 
to a farm
there in 1885 with her new husband, Frank. When she was a girl, her 
schoolteacher had shown
her class a meteorite that had fallen at Estherville, Iowa.
She gathered up meteorites from her farm for five years before anyone else was 
persuaded of
their value. Finally a professor answered her invitation to examine the 
objects, and began a
small meteorite rush that earned her hundreds of dollars. Fully vindicated in 
the eyes of her
husband and  community, her "meteorite farm" became well known for its extra 
crop.
Technically, these meteorites are pallasites - masses of nickel-iron, enclosing 
nodules of the
yellow-green mineral olivine. They feel denser than most stones, and when 
weathered look rusty
brown.
In 1923, Harvey H. Nininger, then a science professor at McPherson College in 
central Kansas,
became interested in meteorites and visited the Kimberly farm. He bought some 
samples from
the now elderly couple, and returned in 1927 to buy a 465-pound (212-kg) 
specimen turned up
by a plowboy. When Nininger chatted with the Kimberlys in 1929, they mentioned 
an old buffalo
wallow where several good pieces of pallasite had been found, along with a lot 
of oxidized frag-
ments.
Curious, Nininger asked to see the place, and was led across a field to a ridge 
that formed an
elliptical ring around a shallow depression about 40 by 60 feet across. To 
Frank, this depression
was only an old wallow that had always held rainwater longer than any other 
place in the flat fields.
It was a bit of a nuisance, and he systematically plowed so as to flatten it. 
But his plow had struck
a 68-pound (31-kg) meteorite there, and his wife had picked up a bushel or more 
of small fragments.

Nininger immediately recognized the hole as the crater from a meteorite impact. 
He had recently
explored the Arizona and the Odessa, Texas, craters, so he was as familiar as 
anyone with how
impact scars should look. He suspected the wallow was blasted out of the plain 
by a large mass
of the same shower that dropped all the other meteorites (a larger mass than 
had been recovered previous to that time).

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