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Barringer and Crater
Daniel Barringer ( 1860 – 1929 ) was one of the first to identify an impact crater, Meteor Crater in Arizona ; to crater specialists the site is referred to as Barringer Crater in his honor.
Examples of craters caused by iron meteoroids include Barringer Meteor Crater, Odessa Meteor Crater, Wabar craters, and Wolfe Creek crater ; iron meteorites are found in association with all of these craters.
* Meteor Crater in Arizona, also known as Barringer Crater, the first confirmed terrestrial impact crater.
* Lonsdaleite ( the rarest allotrope of carbon ) is first discovered in the Barringer Crater, Arizona.
The Holsinger meteorite is the largest discovered fragment of the meteorite that created Meteor Crater and it is exhibited in the crater visitor center. The Barringer Meteor Crater from space.
Scientists refer to the crater as Barringer Crater in honor of Daniel Barringer, who was first to suggest that it was produced by meteorite impact.
The crater is privately owned by the Barringer family through their Barringer Crater Company, which proclaims it to be " the most well known, best preserved meteorite crater on Earth ".
Large-scale terrestrial impacts of the sort that produced the Barringer Crater, locally known as Meteor Crater, northeast of Flagstaff, Arizona, are rare.
Instead, it was widely thought that cratering was the result of volcanism: the Barringer Crater, for example, was ascribed to a prehistoric volcanic explosion ( not an unreasonable hypothesis, given that the volcanic San Francisco Peaks stand only to the west ).
It was not until 1903 – 1905 that the Barringer Crater was correctly identified as being an impact crater, and it was not until as recently as 1963 that research by Eugene Merle Shoemaker conclusively proved this hypothesis.
Aerial view of Barringer Crater in Arizona
All of the chevrons point toward a spot in the middle of the Indian Ocean corresponding with the newly hypothesized Burckle crater proposed to be some in diameter, or about 25 times larger than Barringer Crater.
The nearby Meteor Crater, sometimes known as the Barringer Crater and formerly as the Canyon Diablo crater, is a famous impact crater.

Barringer and .
* Barringer, Tim., Forrester, Gillian, and Martinez-Ruiz, Barbaro.
J. M. Barringer and J. M. Hurwit ( Austin: University of Texas Press ), 2005, pp. 37 – 45.
* 1924 – Patricia Barringer, American baseball player ( d. 2007 )
In 1903, mining engineer and businessman Daniel M. Barringer suggested that the crater had been produced by the impact of a large iron-metallic meteorite.
Barringer and his partner, the mathematician and physicist Benjamin Chew Tilghman, documented evidence for the impact theory in papers presented to the U. S. Geological Survey in 1906 and published in the Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences in Philadelphia.

Barringer and Meteor
For his Ph. D. degree at Princeton ( 1960 ), Shoemaker studied the impact dynamics of Barringer Meteor Crater, located near Winslow, Arizona.
* Barringer Meteor Crater science education page
Daniel Moreau Barringer ( May 25, 1860 – November 30, 1929 ) was a geologist best known as the first person to prove the existence of a meteorite crater on the Earth, the Meteor Crater in Arizona.
The Visitor Center at Barringer Meteor Crater near Winslow, Arizona includes a Museum of planetary geology.
* Daniel Barringer ( 1860 – 1929 ), American geologist best known for proving the Meteor Crater to be an impact crater
* The Barringer Crater ( or The Meteor Crater ), located near Flagstaff, Arizona, one of the largest and best-known meteorite craters on Earth
* Barringer Crater ( aka: Meteor Crater )
Barringer's son, Daniel Barringer Jr., became famous for proving the meteoritic origins of the Meteor Crater in Arizona.
The Canyon Diablo meteorite comprises many fragments of the asteroid that impacted at Barringer Crater ( Meteor Crater ), Arizona, USA.
# " Impact ": Measure the size of the meteor that created Barringer Meteor Crater.
* Daniel Barringer ( geologist ) ( 1860 – 1929 ), geologist, best known for proving the Meteor Crater as being an impact crater

Barringer and Arizona
Barringer, who in 1894 was one of the investors who made $ 15 million in the Commonwealth silver mine in Pearce, Cochise County, Arizona, had ambitious plans for the iron ore.
The couple use their winnings to buy a new car to complete the drive to Winslow, Arizona, which is near Barringer Crater.
In 1960, a natural occurrence of coesite was reported by Edward C. T. Chao, in collaboration with Eugene Shoemaker, from Barringer Crater, in Arizona, USA which was evidence that the crater must have been formed by an impact.
In 1892, Barringer, along with his friend Richard A. F. Penrose, Jr., and others, purchased a gold and silver mine near Cochise, Arizona.
Later, Barringer also discovered the Commonwealth Silver Mine in Pearce, Arizona.
In 1902 Barringer learned of the existence of a large ( 1. 5 km in diameter ) crater, located 35 miles east of Flagstaff, Arizona.
The Wolfe Creek crater has considerable claim to be the second most ' obvious ' ( i. e. relatively undeformed by erosion ) meteorite crater known on Earth, after the famous Barringer Crater in Arizona.
Despite its apparent diminutive size, Pupin is actually larger than the famous Barringer crater in Flagstaff, Arizona.

Barringer and was
Impact physics was poorly understood at the time and Barringer was unaware that most of the meteorite vaporized on impact.
Iron ore of the type found at the crater was valued at the time at $ 125 / ton, so Barringer was searching for a lode he believed to be worth more than a billion 1903 dollars.
Meanwhile, Fox hears from NORAD that the Starman's trajectory, prior to it being shot down, was to Barringer Crater.
Mike was also stolen by Knobby Foot, but was kept on as the former hireling's steed when Knobby Foot joined the Barringer rebellion ( see below ).
The 1943 Sparkman Act, which allowed women physicians to be commissioned as officers in the armed forces, was named for him, after lobbying by Dr. Emily Dunning Barringer.
It was taken over by David Cooper Barringer in 1839, who formed Barringer and Company to operate it.

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