Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-26 Thread mckinney trammell
...and i have a very nice 15+g piece w/ thick fusion crust for sale or trade.

--- On Thu, 12/23/10, bernd.pa...@paulinet.de bernd.pa...@paulinet.de wrote:

 From: bernd.pa...@paulinet.de bernd.pa...@paulinet.de
 Subject: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite
 To: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
 Date: Thursday, December 23, 2010, 6:25 PM
 Happy Birthday, Barwell!
 
 Bernd (in Germany at 00.35 local time ;-)
 
 --
 
 On December 24, 1965, a Christmas present of sorts fell to
 the ground around
 16:20 hrs, when a brilliant fireball swept across southern
 England from a south
 -southwesterly direction and landed in Barwell accompanied
 by a tremendous
 explosion caused by the exploding meteorite that went down
 in history as the
 Christmas Eve meteorite.
 
 The bolide must have been extremely bright. Some
 eyewitnesses say it was brighter
 than the sun, others say it was almost twice as bright as
 Venus. There are also reports
 of color changes during atmospheric descent.
 
 Local residents noted a large explosion, the sky suddenly
 lit up, a whizzing noise was
 heard, there was a loud roar, a low rumbling noise, a
 screaming sound from a low-flying
 object directly overhead, a loud rustling noise after the
 explosion, a sudden thud as
 something hit the ground, a terrible crack, and also
 electrophonic phenomena.
 
 When one local picked up a strange-looking stone about as
 big as his hand, he immediately
 threw it down again because it felt warm. This stone had
 even left a small crater in the
 asphalt road.
 
 Another Barwell resident found a dent in the hood of his
 automobile and a white stone
 on the ground weighing between six and seven pounds.
 
 News of the actual fall was slow to spread but when it did,
 hell broke loose because
 the British Museum had promised financial rewards for each
 and every find. Several
 larger fragments and innumerable small stones were located
 by field parties and local
 residents.
 
 While initial disruption occurred at an altitude of about
 25 miles, final disruption probably
 occurred at a very low altitude above Barwell.
 
 The  Barwell L5 chondrite has a gray interior,
 numerous FeNi specks and grayish chondrules
 that give it a mottled look. Interestingly, some of the
 fragments at Barwell came in from slightly
 different directions - maybe due to strong winds high up in
 the atmosphere because a distinct
 smoke trail rapidly disappeared.
 
 A 17-pounder made a perfectly vertical hole in sandy loam
 soil to a depth of 27 inches.
 A 14 ½ ounce fragment penetrated the roof of a local
 factory.
 A 7-pound piece lay in an 18-inch hole.
 A 6-pound chunk was found in a factory backyard partly
 buried in a cinder heap!
 
 Reference:
 
 Lancaster Brown P. (1966) The Barwell Meteorite (Sky 
 Telescope, July 1966, pp. 7-11).
 
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[meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-23 Thread bernd . pauli
Happy Birthday, Barwell!

Bernd (in Germany at 00.35 local time ;-)

--

On December 24, 1965, a Christmas present of sorts fell to the ground around
16:20 hrs, when a brilliant fireball swept across southern England from a south
-southwesterly direction and landed in Barwell accompanied by a tremendous
explosion caused by the exploding meteorite that went down in history as the
Christmas Eve meteorite.

The bolide must have been extremely bright. Some eyewitnesses say it was 
brighter
than the sun, others say it was almost twice as bright as Venus. There are also 
reports
of color changes during atmospheric descent.

Local residents noted a large explosion, the sky suddenly lit up, a whizzing 
noise was
heard, there was a loud roar, a low rumbling noise, a screaming sound from a 
low-flying
object directly overhead, a loud rustling noise after the explosion, a sudden 
thud as
something hit the ground, a terrible crack, and also electrophonic phenomena.

When one local picked up a strange-looking stone about as big as his hand, he 
immediately
threw it down again because it felt warm. This stone had even left a small 
crater in the
asphalt road.

Another Barwell resident found a dent in the hood of his automobile and a 
white stone
on the ground weighing between six and seven pounds.

News of the actual fall was slow to spread but when it did, hell broke loose 
because
the British Museum had promised financial rewards for each and every find. 
Several
larger fragments and innumerable small stones were located by field parties and 
local
residents.

While initial disruption occurred at an altitude of about 25 miles, final 
disruption probably
occurred at a very low altitude above Barwell.

The  Barwell L5 chondrite has a gray interior, numerous FeNi specks and grayish 
chondrules
that give it a mottled look. Interestingly, some of the fragments at Barwell 
came in from slightly
different directions - maybe due to strong winds high up in the atmosphere 
because a distinct
smoke trail rapidly disappeared.

A 17-pounder made a perfectly vertical hole in sandy loam soil to a depth of 27 
inches.
A 14 ½ ounce fragment penetrated the roof of a local factory.
A 7-pound piece lay in an 18-inch hole.
A 6-pound chunk was found in a factory backyard partly buried in a cinder heap!

Reference:

Lancaster Brown P. (1966) The Barwell Meteorite (Sky  Telescope, July 1966, 
pp. 7-11).

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Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-23 Thread e-mail ensoramanda
Hi Bernd/All,

Hope you have a very merry Barwellmas! Today (23rd) is known by my
family and friends as Ensmas, my birthday and the eve of the Barwell
fall. It fell the day after my 9th birthday a few miles away from home
and sparked of a lifetimes fascination with meteorites I'm still
searching for the bits they missed!

Hope you are all enjoying this festive season.

Graham Ensor



On 23 December 2010 23:25,  bernd.pa...@paulinet.de wrote:
 Happy Birthday, Barwell!

 Bernd (in Germany at 00.35 local time ;-)

 --

 On December 24, 1965, a Christmas present of sorts fell to the ground around
 16:20 hrs, when a brilliant fireball swept across southern England from a 
 south
 -southwesterly direction and landed in Barwell accompanied by a tremendous
 explosion caused by the exploding meteorite that went down in history as the
 Christmas Eve meteorite.

 The bolide must have been extremely bright. Some eyewitnesses say it was 
 brighter
 than the sun, others say it was almost twice as bright as Venus. There are 
 also reports
 of color changes during atmospheric descent.

 Local residents noted a large explosion, the sky suddenly lit up, a whizzing 
 noise was
 heard, there was a loud roar, a low rumbling noise, a screaming sound from a 
 low-flying
 object directly overhead, a loud rustling noise after the explosion, a sudden 
 thud as
 something hit the ground, a terrible crack, and also electrophonic phenomena.

 When one local picked up a strange-looking stone about as big as his hand, he 
 immediately
 threw it down again because it felt warm. This stone had even left a small 
 crater in the
 asphalt road.

 Another Barwell resident found a dent in the hood of his automobile and a 
 white stone
 on the ground weighing between six and seven pounds.

 News of the actual fall was slow to spread but when it did, hell broke loose 
 because
 the British Museum had promised financial rewards for each and every find. 
 Several
 larger fragments and innumerable small stones were located by field parties 
 and local
 residents.

 While initial disruption occurred at an altitude of about 25 miles, final 
 disruption probably
 occurred at a very low altitude above Barwell.

 The  Barwell L5 chondrite has a gray interior, numerous FeNi specks and 
 grayish chondrules
 that give it a mottled look. Interestingly, some of the fragments at Barwell 
 came in from slightly
 different directions - maybe due to strong winds high up in the atmosphere 
 because a distinct
 smoke trail rapidly disappeared.

 A 17-pounder made a perfectly vertical hole in sandy loam soil to a depth of 
 27 inches.
 A 14 ½ ounce fragment penetrated the roof of a local factory.
 A 7-pound piece lay in an 18-inch hole.
 A 6-pound chunk was found in a factory backyard partly buried in a cinder 
 heap!

 Reference:

 Lancaster Brown P. (1966) The Barwell Meteorite (Sky  Telescope, July 1966, 
 pp. 7-11).

 __
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 http://www.meteoritecentral.com/mailing-list-archives.html
 Meteorite-list mailing list
 Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
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Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-23 Thread Larry Atkins

Merry Christmas and Happy Birthday Graham! And Barwell, too!


Sincerely,
Larry Atkins
IMCA # 1941
Ebay username  'alienrockfarm'



-Original Message-
From: e-mail ensoramanda ensorama...@ntlworld.com
To: bernd.pa...@paulinet.de
Cc: Meteorite-list@meteoritecentral.com
Sent: Thu, Dec 23, 2010 5:01 pm
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite


Hi Bernd/All,Hope you have a very merry Barwellmas! Today (23rd) is 
known by myfamily and friends as Ensmas, my birthday and the eve of the 
Barwellfall. It fell the day after my 9th birthday a few miles away 
from homeand sparked of a lifetimes fascination with meteorites I'm 
stillsearching for the bits they missed!Hope you are all enjoying this 
festive season.Graham EnsorOn 23 December 2010 23:25,  
bernd.pa...@paulinet.de wrote: Happy Birthday, Barwell! Bernd (in 
Germany at 00.35 local time ;-) 
-- On December 
24, 1965, a Christmas present of sorts fell to the ground around 16:20 
hrs, when a brilliant fireball swept across southern England from a 
south -southwesterly direction and landed in Barwell accompanied by a 
tremendous explosion caused by the exploding meteorite that went down 
in history as the Christmas Eve meteorite. The bolide must have been 
extremely bright. Some eyewitnesses say it was brighter than the sun, 
others say it was almost twice as bright as Venus. There are also 
reports of color changes during atmospheric descent. Local residents 
noted a large explosion, the sky suddenly lit up, a whizzing noise was 
heard, there was a loud roar, a low rumbling noise, a screaming sound 
from a low-flying object directly overhead, a loud rustling noise 
after the explosion, a sudden thud as something hit the ground, a 
terrible crack, and also electrophonic phenomena. When one local 
picked up a strange-looking stone about as big as his hand, he 
immediately threw it down again because it felt warm. This stone had 
even left a small crater in the asphalt road. Another Barwell 
resident found a dent in the hood of his automobile and a white 
stone on the ground weighing between six and seven pounds. News of 
the actual fall was slow to spread but when it did, hell broke loose 
because the British Museum had promised financial rewards for each and 
every find. Several larger fragments and innumerable small stones were 
located by field parties and local residents. While initial 
disruption occurred at an altitude of about 25 miles, final disruption 
probably occurred at a very low altitude above Barwell. The  Barwell 
L5 chondrite has a gray interior, numerous FeNi specks and grayish 
chondrules that give it a mottled look. Interestingly, some of the 
fragments at Barwell came in from slightly different directions - 
maybe due to strong winds high up in the atmosphere because a distinct 
smoke trail rapidly disappeared. A 17-pounder made a perfectly 
vertical hole in sandy loam soil to a depth of 27 inches. A 14 ½ ounce 
fragment penetrated the roof of a local factory. A 7-pound piece lay 
in an 18-inch hole. A 6-pound chunk was found in a factory backyard 
partly buried in a cinder heap! Reference: Lancaster Brown P. 
(1966) The Barwell Meteorite (Sky  Telescope, July 1966, pp. 7-11). 
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Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-23 Thread Chris Spratt
Hope you find some. Many years ago I was born in nearby Leicester. I  
have a tiny bit sort of feels like I home when I look at it.


Chris Spratt
(Via my iPhone)
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Re: [meteorite-list] Barwell, the Christmas Eve Meteorite

2010-12-23 Thread Shawn Alan
LOL I was going to use that for my pop quiz, beat me to the punch. Ill have to 
think of somethinf else :)
 
Shawn Alan
IMCA 1633
eBaystore
http://shop.ebay.com/photophlow/m.html 

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