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Cape York meteorite : ウィキペディア英語版
Cape York meteorite

The Cape York meteorite is named for Cape York, the location of its discovery in Savissivik, Greenland, and is one of the largest iron meteorites in the world.
==History==

The meteorite collided with Earth nearly 10,000 years ago. The iron masses were known to Inuit as ''Ahnighito'' (the Tent), weighing ; ''the Woman'', weighing ; and ''the Dog'', weighing .〔(Meteoritical Bulletin, no. 28, Moscow (1963) )〕 For centuries, Inuit living near the meteorites used them as a source of metal for tools and harpoons.
The Inuit would work the metal using cold forging—that is, by stamping and hammering it.
The first stories of its existence reached scientific circles in 1818. Five expeditions between 1818 and 1883 failed to find the source of the iron. It was located in 1894 by Robert E. Peary, the famous American Navy Arctic explorer, who had enlisted the help of a local Inuit guide - the one who brought him to Saviksoah Island, just off northern Greenland's Cape York in 1894. It took Peary three years to arrange and carry out the loading of the heavy iron meteorites onto ships. It required the building of Greenland's only (small and short) railroad. Peary sold the pieces for $40,000 to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City where they are still on display.
At the American Museum of Natural History today the 3.4 x 2.1 x 1.7 meter ''Ahnighito'' is open for viewing in the Arthur Ross Hall. The heaviest meteorite that has ever been moved by humans, it is so heavy that it was necessary to build its display stand so that its supports reached through directly to the bedrock below the museum. 〔http://www.amnh.org/exhibitions/permanent-exhibitions/earth-and-planetary-sciences-halls/arthur-ross-hall-of-meteorites/meteorites/ahnighito〕
In 1963, a fourth major piece of the Cape York meteorite was discovered by Vagn F. Buchwald on Agpalilik peninsula. The Agpalilik meteorite, also known as ''the Man'', weighs about , and it is currently on display in the Geological Museum of the University of Copenhagen, Denmark. Other smaller pieces have also been found, such as the Savik I meteorite found in 1911 and the Tunorput fragment found in 1984.

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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