Description
Handsome Display featuring a specimen of Canyon Diablo Meteorite. Case measures 6 inches long by 8 inches high and .75 inches wide. The front of the display is glass.
Meteor Crater, also called Barringer Meteorite Crater, Coon Butte, Arizona Meteor Crater, or Canyon Diablo, rimmed, bowl-shaped pit produced by a large meteorite in the rolling plain of the Canyon Diablo region, 19 miles west of Winslow, Arizona, U.S. The crater is 4,000 feet in diameter and about 600 feet deep inside its rim, which rises nearly 200 feet above the plain. Drillings reveal undisturbed rock beneath 700–800 feet of fill. The strata forming the rim of the crater are upturned and covered with the debris of the same bedrock, which shows an inverted stratigraphy.
Discovered in 1891, its age has been variously estimated at between 5,000 and 50,000 years. Large numbers of nickel–iron fragments from gravel size to 1,400 pounds have been found in a 100-square-mile area. The distribution and composition of several thousand tons of sand-grain size nickel–iron droplets indicate that they condensed from a cloud of metallic vapors. Surveys show only fragments within the pit, but the 1960 discovery there of coesite and stishovite, which are high-pressure modifications of silica, helped to confirm the crater’s meteoritic origin, a position that had been argued for 27 years by Philadelphia mining engineer D.M. Barringer
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