No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 March 2018
Single fragment of iron, having an estimated weight of eleven pounds, was found about the year 1880 on or near the top of Alleghany Mountain, 3 miles north of White Sulphur Springs, Greenbrier County, not far from the eastern border of West Virginia, U.S.A. ; this corresponds to longitude 80° 20' W. of Greenwich, latitude 37° 51' N. The finder and his official agent, thinking it a piece of rich iron ore, searched unsuccessfully for a vein : the specimen itself was taken to a country smith's shop, heated and cut with a cold chisel; the pieces were distributed as specimens of iron ore. Some time afterwards, two of them, weighing respectively 63 oz. and 31 oz., were given by the agent to Mr. Matthew A. Miller, Civil Engineer, of Richmond, Virginia ; convinced of their meteoric origin, he immediately tried to recover the pieces already distributed, but after travelling several hundred miles was forced to the conclusion that they were irrecoverably lost. From Mr. Miller the two pieces were acquired for the British Museum.
page 185 note 1 Philosophical Transactions, 1871, Vol. CLXI. p. 359.
page 185 note 2 Amer. Jour. 8c. 1883, Ser. 2, Vol. XV. p. 365.
page 185 note 3 Mineralogical Magazine, 1887, Vol. VII. p. 124.
page 186 note 1 Amer. Journ. Sc., 1869, Ser. H. Vol. XLVII. p. 271.
page 186 note 2 Comptes Rendus, 1868, Vol. LXVI. p. 569.
page 186 note 3 Amer. Journ. Sc. 1878, Ser. III. Vol. XV. p. 337.