Hi All,

AL wrote: "The Beaver Meteorite was used to prop open a door at a local jail 
house for 
40 some years. Cost for the specimen was finding another stone that cold be use 
to prop
same door open which the buyer found in the form of a chunk of cement because 
rocks
in the area were non-existent."

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.


Best,

Bernd

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