80 



PROCEEDINGS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY 



Date of Fall or Find. 



Found 1S60. 



Found 18G0. 



Found 1860 ? 

 Fell 1860. 



Feb. 2, 11J a. m 



Fell 1860. 



March 28. 



Fell 1860. 



May 1, 122 ?• m. 



No. 



Weight 



in 

 Grams. 



255 



256 



257 

 25S 



259 



260 



25.5 



196.5 



104 



23,030 



5.S95 



Description. 



cubic. Hence this specimen exhibits 

 distinctly octahedral, dodecahedral, and 

 cubic plates. f [Smith Collection.'] 



* Sawed slabs, with crust. [Smith 

 Collection.] 



* Etched slab. [Smith Collection.] 



* Etched slab. [In exchange from 

 C. U. Shepard.] 



* Looks as if it had been through a 

 forge. [Purchased from Liebener Col- 

 lection.] 



Lagrange, Oldham Co., Kentucky, 

 U. S. A. 



Iron. Block with three cut faces, 

 one of them etched, the rest crust. 

 Shows very narrow and somewhat in- 

 distinct Widmanstattian plates. [Smith 

 Collection.] 



Newton County, Arkansas, U. S. A. 

 Stone. Mostly olivine, with large 

 grains of iron. One polished face. Rest 

 of surface crust. Similar to Hainholz. 

 [Smith Collection.] 



* Polished slabs. [Smith Collection.] 



Desert of Atacama, South America. 



Alessandria (San Giuliano Vecchio), 

 Piedmont, Italy. 



Stone. Gray, with dull black crust, 

 and cracks filled with iron. [Purchased 

 from Liebener Collection.] 



Khiragtjrh, S. E. of Bhurtpur, India. 



New Concord, Muskingum County, Ohio, 

 U. S. A. 



Stone. A complete individual, some- 

 what angular, but covered with a dull 

 black crust, and deeply pitted. [Smith 

 Collection.] 



* One polished face, showing consid- 

 erable iron, and gray color, the rest of 

 surface nearly completely covered with 

 crust. [Smith Collection.] 



t Oliver W. Huntington "On the Crystalline Structure of Iron Meteorites," 

 luc. cit. 



