Dear List, E.P.;
The $15 adult visitor fee makes my visit a few years ago at $9 seem a bargain!  
It would be interesting to know how MUCH they think a hunt of the crater meteorite strewn/debris field would bring.

Best,
Dave F.
IMCA #3864


E.P. Grondine wrote:
Hi Ron, list - 

Anybody got any idea when they will conduct meteorite
hunting parties on the site, if ever?

good hunting, 
Ed

--- Ron Baalke <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

  
    
http://www.latimes.com/travel/la-tr-sidetrip20aug20,1,2024700.story
  
Arizona's Meteor Crater: A big bang for your buck
By David Ferrell
Los Angeles Time
August 20, 2006

IF it were due to happen on a specific date - say,
on a moonless Friday
night, when the Arizona sky is frosted with stars -
the popular interest
might be staggering. People and TV trucks might line
the roads at a safe
distance, looking for the best vantage points. All
would point
binoculars or cameras to witness one of the great
celestial spectacles
in history.

As it is, the space rock that landed in the barren
desert near Winslow,
Ariz., fell 50,000 years ago.

A stop between...Grand Canyon and Petrified Forest
national parks. It's
only six miles south of Interstate 40, about 30
minutes' drive east of
Flagstaff.

The draw: Meteor Crater, a pit as round as any moon
crater, is more than
4,000 feet across and deep enough to swallow a
60-story building.

There's a tiny museum with a gift shop but no resort
hotels, no
adjoining casinos and not a single theme restaurant.
The crater is
pretty much all there is, and yet an estimated
230,000 people still come
to see it each year. Apollo astronauts trained
inside it in the 1960s
because of its similarity to lunar craters.

Visitors stare at the crater's steep, pale-mustard
walls, look to the
sky and try to grasp what it must have been like
when worlds collided.
Scientists estimate that the object that landed here
was only 150 feet
in diameter but struck with the force of 20 million
tons of TNT. It
would have roared from the sky at a mind-boggling
40,000 mph.

"This is impressive," said Bob McNabb of Portland,
Ore., who was gazing
at the crater from the uppermost of three
observation decks along the
northern rim. "Some people said, 'Yeah, it's just a
big hole in the
ground' - but we're glad we came."

The site is still owned by the descendants of Daniel
Barringer, who
began exploring the crater in 1903 and staked the
original claim, hoping
to mine the meteorite itself. The rock must have
disintegrated, however,
because no significant piece of it has ever been
recovered.

The lesson of Meteor Crater is that Earth is in
constant danger. As a
museum display points out, a huge explosion in
Tunguska, Siberia, in
1908, knocked down trees across about 800 square
miles. "A very large
meteorite could be disastrous," a placard warns,
"creating a huge
initial blast, followed by tsunamis, wildfires,
prolonged darkness and
atmospheric effects."

A smaller Meteor Crater-size impact may happen every
50,000 years. Which
means, perhaps, we're due for another.

The delay: It's a 10- or 15-minute detour off
Interstate 40 to the
crater. Allow 60 to 90 minutes to see the museum,
walk along the rim and
check out the view from the observation decks.
Guided tours of the rim
leave hourly between 9:15 a.m. and 2:15 p.m. daily.

*

Meteor Crater, Exit 233 off Interstate 40. Open 7
a.m. to 7 p.m. between
Memorial Day and Labor Day, and 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. the
rest of the year.
$15, $13 seniors; $6 ages 6-17, 5 and younger free.
(928) 289-5898,
http://www.meteorcrater.com .


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