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

Nininger was one of the few American scientists of the day who was very active 
in field
studies of meteorites. The few who kept up with the subject of impact craters - 
this was
the third one recognized in the United States - thought that a great mass of 
iron or stone
lay buried deep under the crater bottom.
Nininger suggested to the Kimberlys that some probing and more investigation of 
the wallow
might help scientific studies. He asked permission to excavate, but Frank 
denied the request.
There was a good stand of wheat growing there (Mr Binford and Steve!), and if 
hail storms and
early hot winds didn't ruin the crop a good harvest would be ready in a couple 
of months. Wheat
was valuable and Frank did not care to have part of the crop trampled by men 
and horses for such
a questionable project. So he told Nininger that nothing would be done till 
after harvest, and
that his family preferred to do its own digging.
With a hand shovel he had brought, however, Nininger was permitted to explore a 
little. In a short
trench inside the southeastern rim, he uncovered some potato-sized rusty brown 
nodules just below
plow depth. These crumbled easily, and revealed crystals of olivine exactly 
like those found in the
meteorites (Darren !). Frank realized this meant the nodules were oxidized 
meteorites, but since he
had been unable to sell any such pieces he attached little commercial value to 
them.
In following years Nininger and the Kimberlys kept in touch. To avoid having 
unskilled treasure
hunters ruin the wallow, its presence was not publicized. Frank and his family 
did some digging
there about 1930, and found a lot more of the oxidized fragments two or three 
feet under the
surface. Finally, in 1933, Nininger secured the Kimberly family's permission 
for him to excavate
the crater. At this time he also obtained a grant to finance the project.
He hired a team of men to remove the soil with hand shovels, horse-drawn slips, 
and large scrapers.
He directed that each scoop of dirt be carefully examined and sifted to recover 
as many meteorites
as possible. Those found ranged from the size of a grain of wheat to a chunk of 
85 pounds (39 kg).
One laborer remarked, "The professor sure was particular; sometimes he had us 
use ice picks and
spoons to dig out a rock that you could see in the wall or bottom of the cut." 
Most of the workers
came from the Kimberly and neighboring Evans families.
Crater fill was removed with the horsedrawn scraper until the rust stains were 
reached; these marked
the meteorite-bearing zone. Then shovelers took over to free the individual 
pieces. Every one they
located was completely oxidized and many were quite moist, so great care was 
needed to preserve them.
Half of the 1,200 pounds (540 kg) thus uncovered was in pieces weighing between 
10 and 85 pounds
(4 to 39 kg). The rest was in smaller fragments. Unexpectedly, no single large 
meteorite was found.
Instead, the fragment-filled soil formed a cone extending into the ground. Old 
theories began to give
way to observational data.
When the excavation was finished, and the crater refilled, several thousand 
pieces had been recovered.
In the decades since then, plowing and filling have caused the buffalo wallow 
to disappear gradually,
so that it is now nearly impossible to recognize. Thus, the Kimberlys' 
meteorite impact crater was one
of the few to be completely excavated, and may be the only one that no longer 
exists. But local farmers
still turn up fragments from time to time, and most meteorite collections 
possess samples.

Those pieces come under several names, however. The former towns of Brenham and 
Haviland, each only
a crossroads now, are near the farm, and each has given its name to part of the 
evidence - Brenham to
the meteorites, Haviland to the crater. Also, an unrelated meteorite found 
nearby is named Haviland.
The largest of the Brenham meteorites, a half-ton specimen found after Nininger 
finished there, is
displayed in the municipal museum at Greensburg, the Kiowa County seat. It is 
one of the largest
pallasites in the world.

A 454.5 kilogram (1,002-pound) pallasite meteorite was discovered in 1948, 
buried under 63 inches
of soil (about 1.60 m) near Greensburg, Kansas.

Editor's note: This article has been adapted from a forthcoming book (116 
pages) by Ellis Peck.
Entitled Space Rocks And Buffalo Grass, it will be published and distributed by 
Peach Enterprises,
Inc., 4649 Gerald, Warren, Mich. 48092.

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