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American Meteorite Museum : ウィキペディア英語版
Harvey H. Nininger

| death_place = Westminster, Colorado
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| nationality = American
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| known_for = Revived interest in the scientific study of meteorites in the 1930s
| notable_works = Assembled the largest personal collection of meteorites up to his time.
Founded the American Meteorite Museum (1942-1960).
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| spouse = Addie N. (Delp) Nininger
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Harvey Harlow Nininger (January 17, 1887 – March 1, 1986) was an American meteoriticist and educator, and although he was self-taught, he revived interest in scientific study of meteorites in the 1930s and assembled the largest personal collection of meteorites up to that time.
He founded the American Meteorite Museum, which was first located near Meteor Crater, Arizona (1942–1953), then in Sedona, Arizona (1953–1960).
Part of the Nininger Collection was sold to the British Museum in 1958, and the remainder of the collection was sold to the Arizona State University Center for Meteorite Studies in 1960 which displays a selection of these meteorites in their public museum.
==History==
Dr. Fletcher Watson of Harvard University in his book ''Between The Planets'' (1941) that Nininger was accounting for half of all the meteorite discoveries in the world at that time. In his career, Nininger published some 162 scientific papers and four books relating to meteorites.

Nininger's career as a self-taught and self-financed meteorite scientist and collector was unique. He lived to see meteoritics receive serious attention in the earth and space sciences, as he had urged for forty years. Nininger is considered by many today to be the father of modern meteoritics, having recovered a substantial portion of the meteorites available to scientists today as well as bringing to attention the fact that meteorites are present in great enough concentrations on Earth's surface to actually warrant looking for. Before Nininger actively pursued his meteorite hunting endeavors, many scientists regarded it as a folly to spend one's time doing so, believing meteorites to be so uncommon as to render searching for them a complete waste of time.〔Nininger, ''Find a Falling Star'', p.13.〕
In 1965, Nininger and his wife endowed the Nininger Meteorite Award, awarded annually by the Center for Meteorite Studies at Arizona State University.()


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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