Port Orford Meteorite Hoax
Claimed discovery
Dr. John Evans, a medical doctor and government-appointed geologist working for the United States Department of the Interior, claimed to have found a 10-ton (10,000 kg) pallasite meteorite in coastal Oregon (then Oregon Territory) on a "bald mountain" above Port Orford in 1856. Evans returned a sample to the East Coast, but he died of pneumonia in 1861 before the discovery could be corroborated.
Hoax
It has been reported as a hoax, with modern metallurgical and other analysis showing that a 28 gram specimen collected by Evans was actually part of the Imilac Chilean meteorite of 1822 and probably acquired by him in Panama on his return to the United States East Coast. The mountain of Evans' claimed find has been tentatively identified as Johnson Mountain from Evans' reports and field notes; surveys of the area with sensitive proton magnetometers in the 1980s failed to show evidence of a nickel-rich meteorite there.
References
Notes
- ^ Clarke 1993, p. 10.
- ^ Pruett 2012.
- ^ Clarke 1993, p. 8.
- ^ John 2011.
- ^ Clarke 2006.
- ^ LaLande 2016.
- ^ Clarke 1993, pp. 7–11.
Sources
- Clarke, Roy S. (1993), "The Port Orford, Oregon, Meteorite Mystery", Smithsonian Contributions to the Earth Sciences, 31 (31): 1–43, doi:10.5479/si.00810274.31.1
- R.S. Clarke; et al. (2006), "Meteorites and the Smithsonian Institution", in Gerald Joseph Home McCall; A. J. Bowden; Richard John Howarth (eds.), The History of Meteoritics and Key Meteorite Collections: Fireballs, Falls and Finds, Geological Society of London, p. 242, ISBN 978-1-86239-194-9
- Henderson, E.P.; Dole, Hollis M. (1964), "The Port Orford Meteorite" (PDF), The Ore Bin, 26 (7)
- John, Finn J.D. (December 11, 2011), "The Port Orford Meteorite: Was it all a big hoax?", Offbeat Oregon ( cc-by-sa )
- LaLande, Jeff (2016), "Port Orford Meteorite Hoax", Encyclopedia of Oregon, Oregon Historical Society and Portland State University
- Pruett, J. Hugh (June 15, 2012), "The Lost Port Orford, Oregon, Meteorite (ECN =+ 1245,428:)", Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 4 (16): 286–290, doi:10.1111/j.1945-5100.1950.tb00135.x