Serveur d'exploration sur la musique en Sarre

Attention, ce site est en cours de développement !
Attention, site généré par des moyens informatiques à partir de corpus bruts.
Les informations ne sont donc pas validées.

Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research

Identifieur interne : 000466 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 000465; suivant : 000467

Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research

Auteurs : Ursula B. Marvin

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425

English descriptors

Abstract

Abstract— In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book, Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425

Le document en format XML

<record>
<TEI wicri:istexFullTextTei="biblStruct">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title xml:lang="en">Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Marvin, Ursula B" sort="Marvin, Ursula B" uniqKey="Marvin U" first="Ursula B." last="Marvin">Ursula B. Marvin</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>E-mail: umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<idno type="wicri:source">ISTEX</idno>
<idno type="RBID">ISTEX:2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425</idno>
<date when="2007" year="2007">2007</date>
<idno type="doi">10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</idno>
<idno type="url">https://api.istex.fr/document/2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425/fulltext/pdf</idno>
<idno type="wicri:Area/Istex/Corpus">000466</idno>
<idno type="wicri:explorRef" wicri:stream="Istex" wicri:step="Corpus" wicri:corpus="ISTEX">000466</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct>
<analytic>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
<author>
<name sortKey="Marvin, Ursula B" sort="Marvin, Ursula B" uniqKey="Marvin U" first="Ursula B." last="Marvin">Ursula B. Marvin</name>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
<affiliation>
<mods:affiliation>E-mail: umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</mods:affiliation>
</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<monogr></monogr>
<series>
<title level="j">Meteoritics & Planetary Science</title>
<idno type="ISSN">1086-9379</idno>
<idno type="eISSN">1945-5100</idno>
<imprint>
<publisher>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher>
<pubPlace>Oxford, UK</pubPlace>
<date type="published" when="2007-09">2007-09</date>
<biblScope unit="volume">42</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">S9</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" from="B3">B3</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" to="B68">B68</biblScope>
</imprint>
<idno type="ISSN">1086-9379</idno>
</series>
<idno type="istex">2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</idno>
<idno type="ArticleID">MAPS606</idno>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
<seriesStmt>
<idno type="ISSN">1086-9379</idno>
</seriesStmt>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<textClass>
<keywords scheme="Teeft" xml:lang="en">
<term>Agram</term>
<term>Albareto</term>
<term>Annalen</term>
<term>April</term>
<term>Argentina</term>
<term>Asteroid</term>
<term>Astronomer</term>
<term>Barbotan</term>
<term>Barthold</term>
<term>Benares</term>
<term>Benzenberg</term>
<term>Bertrand</term>
<term>Bingley</term>
<term>Biot</term>
<term>Blumenbach</term>
<term>Bohemia</term>
<term>Bournon</term>
<term>Bremen</term>
<term>Britannique</term>
<term>British museum</term>
<term>Bronson</term>
<term>Celis</term>
<term>Ceres</term>
<term>Chaco</term>
<term>Chemical analyses</term>
<term>Chemie</term>
<term>Chemist</term>
<term>Chimie</term>
<term>Chladni</term>
<term>Chondrite</term>
<term>Cielo</term>
<term>Concretion</term>
<term>Cosmic origin</term>
<term>Cosmic space</term>
<term>Cotentin</term>
<term>Cottage stone</term>
<term>Crust</term>
<term>Czegka</term>
<term>December</term>
<term>Deluc</term>
<term>Ellicott</term>
<term>Engraving</term>
<term>Ensisheim</term>
<term>Eruption</term>
<term>February</term>
<term>Fierro</term>
<term>Fiery meteors</term>
<term>Fireball</term>
<term>First person</term>
<term>Folk tales</term>
<term>Fossil</term>
<term>Fourcroy</term>
<term>Fourgeroux</term>
<term>Friedrich</term>
<term>Guillaume deluc</term>
<term>Gunther</term>
<term>Haidinger</term>
<term>Herschel</term>
<term>Hoppe</term>
<term>Hraschina</term>
<term>Humboldt</term>
<term>Iron meteorites</term>
<term>Ironmasses</term>
<term>Izarn</term>
<term>January</term>
<term>Johann</term>
<term>Joseph banks</term>
<term>July</term>
<term>June</term>
<term>Klaproth</term>
<term>Krasnojarsk</term>
<term>Lambotin</term>
<term>Lavoisier</term>
<term>Leipzig</term>
<term>Lettre</term>
<term>Lichtenberg</term>
<term>Lunar origin</term>
<term>Magazin</term>
<term>Malleable</term>
<term>Malleable iron</term>
<term>Marais</term>
<term>Memoir</term>
<term>Metal grains</term>
<term>Metallic iron</term>
<term>Meteor</term>
<term>Meteorite</term>
<term>Meteorite fall</term>
<term>Meteoritics</term>
<term>Mineralogist</term>
<term>Mitchill</term>
<term>Modena</term>
<term>Modern meteorite research</term>
<term>National institute</term>
<term>Native iron</term>
<term>Native irons</term>
<term>Natural history</term>
<term>Naturalist</term>
<term>Naturelle</term>
<term>Nininger</term>
<term>November</term>
<term>October</term>
<term>Olbers</term>
<term>Pallas</term>
<term>Pallas iron</term>
<term>Paneth</term>
<term>Patrin</term>
<term>Philosophical magazine</term>
<term>Philosophical transactions</term>
<term>Physik</term>
<term>Physique</term>
<term>Piazzi</term>
<term>Pictet</term>
<term>Pillinger</term>
<term>Planetary science</term>
<term>Pyrite</term>
<term>Pyrites</term>
<term>Royal academy</term>
<term>Royal society</term>
<term>Salles</term>
<term>Savant</term>
<term>Schreibers</term>
<term>Second edition</term>
<term>September</term>
<term>Shooting stars</term>
<term>Siena</term>
<term>Siena fall</term>
<term>Silliman</term>
<term>Small bodies</term>
<term>Smithsonian institution</term>
<term>Solar system</term>
<term>Soldani</term>
<term>Solid bodies</term>
<term>Sulfur</term>
<term>Tabor</term>
<term>Tata</term>
<term>Thomas jefferson</term>
<term>Thomson</term>
<term>Titius</term>
<term>Title page</term>
<term>Topham</term>
<term>Treatise</term>
<term>Troili</term>
<term>Uranus</term>
<term>Ursula</term>
<term>Vauquelin</term>
<term>Vesuvius</term>
<term>Volcanic</term>
<term>Volcanic origin</term>
<term>Volcanism</term>
<term>Volcano</term>
<term>Wilhelm olbers</term>
<term>William thomson</term>
<term>Wittenberg</term>
<term>Yale college</term>
<term>Yankee professors</term>
<term>York city</term>
<term>Yorkshire</term>
<term>Zach</term>
</keywords>
</textClass>
<langUsage>
<language ident="en">en</language>
</langUsage>
</profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<front>
<div type="abstract">Abstract— In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book, Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.</div>
</front>
</TEI>
<istex>
<corpusName>wiley</corpusName>
<keywords>
<teeft>
<json:string>chladni</json:string>
<json:string>fireball</json:string>
<json:string>siena</json:string>
<json:string>meteoritics</json:string>
<json:string>pallas</json:string>
<json:string>deluc</json:string>
<json:string>britannique</json:string>
<json:string>ursula</json:string>
<json:string>patrin</json:string>
<json:string>lichtenberg</json:string>
<json:string>soldani</json:string>
<json:string>december</json:string>
<json:string>olbers</json:string>
<json:string>pictet</json:string>
<json:string>silliman</json:string>
<json:string>february</json:string>
<json:string>paneth</json:string>
<json:string>royal society</json:string>
<json:string>bournon</json:string>
<json:string>pallas iron</json:string>
<json:string>ensisheim</json:string>
<json:string>biot</json:string>
<json:string>mitchill</json:string>
<json:string>modern meteorite research</json:string>
<json:string>troili</json:string>
<json:string>naturelle</json:string>
<json:string>meteorite</json:string>
<json:string>izarn</json:string>
<json:string>july</json:string>
<json:string>january</json:string>
<json:string>june</json:string>
<json:string>chemie</json:string>
<json:string>tata</json:string>
<json:string>chondrite</json:string>
<json:string>pyrite</json:string>
<json:string>vesuvius</json:string>
<json:string>thomson</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogist</json:string>
<json:string>benares</json:string>
<json:string>april</json:string>
<json:string>hraschina</json:string>
<json:string>natural history</json:string>
<json:string>september</json:string>
<json:string>savant</json:string>
<json:string>philosophical transactions</json:string>
<json:string>zach</json:string>
<json:string>astronomer</json:string>
<json:string>siena fall</json:string>
<json:string>herschel</json:string>
<json:string>annalen</json:string>
<json:string>november</json:string>
<json:string>physik</json:string>
<json:string>haidinger</json:string>
<json:string>celis</json:string>
<json:string>agram</json:string>
<json:string>joseph banks</json:string>
<json:string>albareto</json:string>
<json:string>barbotan</json:string>
<json:string>czegka</json:string>
<json:string>thomas jefferson</json:string>
<json:string>vauquelin</json:string>
<json:string>smithsonian institution</json:string>
<json:string>lettre</json:string>
<json:string>october</json:string>
<json:string>schreibers</json:string>
<json:string>tabor</json:string>
<json:string>iron meteorites</json:string>
<json:string>pyrites</json:string>
<json:string>fourcroy</json:string>
<json:string>cosmic origin</json:string>
<json:string>fierro</json:string>
<json:string>ceres</json:string>
<json:string>ironmasses</json:string>
<json:string>native irons</json:string>
<json:string>philosophical magazine</json:string>
<json:string>small bodies</json:string>
<json:string>chimie</json:string>
<json:string>benzenberg</json:string>
<json:string>crust</json:string>
<json:string>chemist</json:string>
<json:string>bronson</json:string>
<json:string>solar system</json:string>
<json:string>wittenberg</json:string>
<json:string>pillinger</json:string>
<json:string>lambotin</json:string>
<json:string>blumenbach</json:string>
<json:string>salles</json:string>
<json:string>yankee professors</json:string>
<json:string>chemical analyses</json:string>
<json:string>nininger</json:string>
<json:string>barthold</json:string>
<json:string>friedrich</json:string>
<json:string>marais</json:string>
<json:string>british museum</json:string>
<json:string>leipzig</json:string>
<json:string>cielo</json:string>
<json:string>native iron</json:string>
<json:string>fourgeroux</json:string>
<json:string>titius</json:string>
<json:string>wilhelm olbers</json:string>
<json:string>william thomson</json:string>
<json:string>first person</json:string>
<json:string>topham</json:string>
<json:string>meteor</json:string>
<json:string>lavoisier</json:string>
<json:string>volcano</json:string>
<json:string>asteroid</json:string>
<json:string>cosmic space</json:string>
<json:string>fossil</json:string>
<json:string>bohemia</json:string>
<json:string>bremen</json:string>
<json:string>concretion</json:string>
<json:string>title page</json:string>
<json:string>piazzi</json:string>
<json:string>ellicott</json:string>
<json:string>modena</json:string>
<json:string>hoppe</json:string>
<json:string>klaproth</json:string>
<json:string>magazin</json:string>
<json:string>krasnojarsk</json:string>
<json:string>volcanism</json:string>
<json:string>yorkshire</json:string>
<json:string>cotentin</json:string>
<json:string>uranus</json:string>
<json:string>chaco</json:string>
<json:string>national institute</json:string>
<json:string>humboldt</json:string>
<json:string>bingley</json:string>
<json:string>guillaume deluc</json:string>
<json:string>malleable</json:string>
<json:string>gunther</json:string>
<json:string>physique</json:string>
<json:string>shooting stars</json:string>
<json:string>volcanic origin</json:string>
<json:string>meteorite fall</json:string>
<json:string>royal academy</json:string>
<json:string>johann</json:string>
<json:string>bertrand</json:string>
<json:string>treatise</json:string>
<json:string>volcanic</json:string>
<json:string>sulfur</json:string>
<json:string>fiery meteors</json:string>
<json:string>folk tales</json:string>
<json:string>planetary science</json:string>
<json:string>malleable iron</json:string>
<json:string>second edition</json:string>
<json:string>metallic iron</json:string>
<json:string>lunar origin</json:string>
<json:string>york city</json:string>
<json:string>cottage stone</json:string>
<json:string>metal grains</json:string>
<json:string>yale college</json:string>
<json:string>solid bodies</json:string>
<json:string>naturalist</json:string>
<json:string>argentina</json:string>
<json:string>eruption</json:string>
<json:string>memoir</json:string>
<json:string>engraving</json:string>
<json:string>sears</json:string>
<json:string>atmospheric origin</json:string>
<json:string>monatliche correspondenz</json:string>
<json:string>short order</json:string>
<json:string>electric fluid</json:string>
<json:string>personal communication</json:string>
<json:string>iron mass</json:string>
<json:string>john lloyd williams</json:string>
<json:string>stony meteorites</json:string>
<json:string>interstellar origin</json:string>
<json:string>other planets</json:string>
<json:string>modern times</json:string>
<json:string>elliptical orbits</json:string>
<json:string>albareto stone</json:string>
<json:string>hraschina irons</json:string>
<json:string>charles blagden</json:string>
<json:string>large mass</json:string>
<json:string>edward king</json:string>
<json:string>iron oxide</json:string>
<json:string>georg christoph lichtenberg</json:string>
<json:string>credulous people</json:string>
<json:string>imperial cabinet</json:string>
<json:string>cast iron</json:string>
<json:string>meteoric stones</json:string>
<json:string>history cabinet</json:string>
<json:string>bolshoi emir</json:string>
<json:string>black crust</json:string>
<json:string>natural philosophers</json:string>
<json:string>lightning stones</json:string>
<json:string>york spectator</json:string>
<json:string>eyewitness reports</json:string>
<json:string>upper atmosphere</json:string>
<json:string>full moon</json:string>
<json:string>wolfgang czegka</json:string>
<json:string>iron meteorite</json:string>
<json:string>iron masses</json:string>
<json:string>comet</json:string>
<json:string>naples</json:string>
<json:string>campo</json:string>
<json:string>elliptical</json:string>
<json:string>meteoric</json:string>
<json:string>stone</json:string>
<json:string>irons</json:string>
<json:string>fragment</json:string>
<json:string>asteroidal</json:string>
<json:string>laplace</json:string>
<json:string>guillaume</json:string>
<json:string>smithsonian</json:string>
<json:string>kingsley</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogical</json:string>
<json:string>gauss</json:string>
<json:string>smithsonian institution libraries</json:string>
<json:string>different times</json:string>
<json:string>ordinary chondrites</json:string>
<json:string>outer fringes</json:string>
<json:string>high ridge</json:string>
<json:string>main components</json:string>
<json:string>interstellar space</json:string>
<json:string>large body</json:string>
<json:string>geological society</json:string>
<json:string>atti delle scienze</json:string>
<json:string>main mass</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogical museum</json:string>
<json:string>hyperbolic orbits</json:string>
<json:string>arizona press</json:string>
<json:string>domenico troili</json:string>
<json:string>meteorite collections</json:string>
<json:string>physik chladni</json:string>
<json:string>czech republic</json:string>
<json:string>thomson figures</json:string>
<json:string>lettera apologetica</json:string>
<json:string>national biography</json:string>
<json:string>louis bertrand</json:string>
<json:string>benjamin franklin</json:string>
<json:string>oxford dictionary</json:string>
<json:string>denselben herabgefallenen massen</json:string>
<json:string>wilhelm karl haidinger</json:string>
<json:string>same time</json:string>
<json:string>great excitement</json:string>
<json:string>buenos aires</json:string>
<json:string>shock waves</json:string>
<json:string>such importance</json:string>
<json:string>recent years</json:string>
<json:string>friedrich junius</json:string>
<json:string>great fireball</json:string>
<json:string>huge blocks</json:string>
<json:string>full credit</json:string>
<json:string>karl bonnet</json:string>
<json:string>benjamin silliman</json:string>
<json:string>great britain</json:string>
<json:string>cosmochimica acta</json:string>
<json:string>hostile reactions</json:string>
<json:string>citizen marais</json:string>
<json:string>high cloud</json:string>
<json:string>lithophylacium mitisianum</json:string>
<json:string>meteoritics marvin</json:string>
<json:string>same year</json:string>
<json:string>lightning bolts</json:string>
<json:string>stones fall</json:string>
<json:string>enormous explosion</json:string>
<json:string>maiden lane</json:string>
<json:string>such things</json:string>
<json:string>neuesten zustand</json:string>
<json:string>sound waves</json:string>
<json:string>such stones</json:string>
<json:string>pallas gefundenen</json:string>
<json:string>daniel salmon</json:string>
<json:string>meteorite origins</json:string>
<json:string>william herschel</json:string>
<json:string>wide space</json:string>
<json:string>extraordinary phenomenon</json:string>
<json:string>black crusts</json:string>
<json:string>president jefferson</json:string>
<json:string>asteroid belt</json:string>
<json:string>brilliant fireball</json:string>
<json:string>harvard university</json:string>
<json:string>scientific biography</json:string>
<json:string>william hamilton</json:string>
<json:string>large stone</json:string>
<json:string>marvin</json:string>
<json:string>crater</json:string>
<json:string>eyewitness</json:string>
<json:string>silica</json:string>
<json:string>stormy cloud</json:string>
<json:string>volcanic eruptions</json:string>
<json:string>igneous mass</json:string>
<json:string>guglielmo thomson</json:string>
<json:string>ambrogio soldani</json:string>
<json:string>spectacular shower</json:string>
<json:string>artificial materials</json:string>
<json:string>celestial bodies</json:string>
<json:string>mineral collection</json:string>
<json:string>huge iron</json:string>
<json:string>first scholar</json:string>
<json:string>coarse octahedrite</json:string>
<json:string>british mineralogy</json:string>
<json:string>ferrum nativum</json:string>
<json:string>metric tons</json:string>
<json:string>great stone</json:string>
<json:string>cottage fall</json:string>
<json:string>edward book</json:string>
<json:string>first treatise</json:string>
<json:string>iron mine</json:string>
<json:string>antient times</json:string>
<json:string>long subtitle</json:string>
<json:string>professor soldani</json:string>
<json:string>huge mass</json:string>
<json:string>johann blumenbach</json:string>
<json:string>much attention</json:string>
<json:string>smaller pieces</json:string>
<json:string>sibari stone</json:string>
<json:string>friedrich adolf paneth</json:string>
<json:string>journal articles</json:string>
<json:string>ancient smelting operations</json:string>
<json:string>active volcanoes</json:string>
<json:string>german miles</json:string>
<json:string>malleable metal</json:string>
<json:string>meteor region</json:string>
<json:string>clear nights</json:string>
<json:string>imperial academy</json:string>
<json:string>poet laureate</json:string>
<json:string>bjelaja zerkov</json:string>
<json:string>forest fires</json:string>
<json:string>russian scientists</json:string>
<json:string>local people</json:string>
<json:string>gritty interiors</json:string>
<json:string>benares stones</json:string>
<json:string>analytical work</json:string>
<json:string>french chemist</json:string>
<json:string>chemistry laboratory</json:string>
<json:string>german professor</json:string>
<json:string>bohemian iron</json:string>
<json:string>houghton library</json:string>
<json:string>impossible phenomenon</json:string>
<json:string>country people</json:string>
<json:string>same kind</json:string>
<json:string>pyritiferous rocks</json:string>
<json:string>german translation</json:string>
<json:string>empty space</json:string>
<json:string>second stone</json:string>
<json:string>first edition</json:string>
<json:string>short time</json:string>
<json:string>great debates</json:string>
<json:string>first chemical analysis</json:string>
<json:string>corresponding member</json:string>
<json:string>high velocities</json:string>
<json:string>french translation</json:string>
<json:string>cosmic debris</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogical description</json:string>
<json:string>meteorite studies</json:string>
<json:string>natural causes</json:string>
<json:string>recent letter</json:string>
<json:string>brassy mineral</json:string>
<json:string>bodies fall</json:string>
<json:string>marvin britannique</json:string>
<json:string>cannon ball</json:string>
<json:string>strong odor</json:string>
<json:string>curious globules</json:string>
<json:string>martial pyrites</json:string>
<json:string>chemical composition</json:string>
<json:string>humboldt university</json:string>
<json:string>ensisheim stone</json:string>
<json:string>loud peal</json:string>
<json:string>electric discharge</json:string>
<json:string>serene weather</json:string>
<json:string>large number</json:string>
<json:string>genuine meteorites</json:string>
<json:string>ensisheim fall</json:string>
<json:string>good luck</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogical work</json:string>
<json:string>small cloud</json:string>
<json:string>natural history museum</json:string>
<json:string>true cause</json:string>
<json:string>lunar volcanism</json:string>
<json:string>fiery chains</json:string>
<json:string>lunar craters</json:string>
<json:string>second book</json:string>
<json:string>sheer chance</json:string>
<json:string>large bodies</json:string>
<json:string>ordinary rocks</json:string>
<json:string>great majority</json:string>
<json:string>same thing</json:string>
<json:string>mineralogical descriptions</json:string>
<json:string>ernst florens friedrich chladni</json:string>
<json:string>more stones</json:string>
<json:string>great interest</json:string>
<json:string>solid matter</json:string>
<json:string>dark portions</json:string>
<json:string>siberian mass</json:string>
<json:string>baron ignaz</json:string>
<json:string>previous month</json:string>
<json:string>national museum</json:string>
<json:string>country rock</json:string>
<json:string>black stone</json:string>
<json:string>medical doctor</json:string>
<json:string>whole story</json:string>
<json:string>viscous matter</json:string>
<json:string>violent thunderclap</json:string>
<json:string>small piece</json:string>
<json:string>huge masses</json:string>
<json:string>american astronomer</json:string>
<json:string>conrad gesner</json:string>
<json:string>fairfield county</json:string>
<json:string>belemnite fossils</json:string>
<json:string>isaac newton</json:string>
<json:string>eighteenth century</json:string>
<json:string>several years</json:string>
<json:string>volcanic activity</json:string>
<json:string>cosmic velocities</json:string>
<json:string>inflammable gases</json:string>
<json:string>apparent sizes</json:string>
<json:string>young republic</json:string>
<json:string>present time</json:string>
<json:string>monthly magazine</json:string>
<json:string>curious personages</json:string>
<json:string>terrestrial comet</json:string>
<json:string>scholarly inquiry</json:string>
<json:string>marvin chladni</json:string>
<json:string>meteor stone</json:string>
<json:string>meteoric production</json:string>
<json:string>weston meteorite</json:string>
<json:string>professor silliman</json:string>
<json:string>famous collection</json:string>
<json:string>yale university</json:string>
<json:string>alkali fusion method</json:string>
<json:string>embryonic state</json:string>
<json:string>bronze statue</json:string>
<json:string>harvard college observatory</json:string>
<json:string>massachusetts institute</json:string>
<json:string>nitric acid</json:string>
<json:string>kenntniss meteorischer stein</json:string>
<json:string>elbogen iron</json:string>
<json:string>credit chladni</json:string>
<json:string>rare instances</json:string>
<json:string>huge sizes</json:string>
<json:string>different compositions</json:string>
<json:string>metallurgical patterns</json:string>
<json:string>historical reports</json:string>
<json:string>special interest</json:string>
<json:string>short article</json:string>
<json:string>english mineralogist</json:string>
<json:string>crystalline structure</json:string>
<json:string>contemporary literature</json:string>
<json:string>other sources</json:string>
<json:string>university appointment</json:string>
<json:string>many years</json:string>
<json:string>deutschen staatsbibliothek</json:string>
<json:string>ernst florenz friedrich chladni</json:string>
<json:string>meteoritical society</json:string>
<json:string>original manuscript</json:string>
<json:string>french version</json:string>
<json:string>northern europe</json:string>
<json:string>first history</json:string>
<json:string>twentieth century</json:string>
<json:string>unfriendly neighbor</json:string>
<json:string>lawrence smith</json:string>
<json:string>simon pallas</json:string>
<json:string>chemical results</json:string>
<json:string>asteroidal origin</json:string>
<json:string>southern bavaria</json:string>
<json:string>crustal rocks</json:string>
<json:string>elliptical orbit</json:string>
<json:string>allan hills</json:string>
<json:string>martian meteorite</json:string>
<json:string>silicon carbide</json:string>
<json:string>premature ideas</json:string>
<json:string>others regard</json:string>
<json:string>sulphurous fumes</json:string>
<json:string>professor benjamin silliman</json:string>
<json:string>early earth</json:string>
<json:string>johann friedrich hartknoch</json:string>
<json:string>lord horatio nelson</json:string>
<json:string>various kinds</json:string>
<json:string>california press</json:string>
<json:string>hnlicher eisenmassen</json:string>
<json:string>form fireballs</json:string>
<json:string>memoria sulla pioggia</json:string>
<json:string>verbindung stehende naturerscheinungen</json:string>
<json:string>einige damit</json:string>
<json:string>science czegka</json:string>
<json:string>pierres britannique deluc</json:string>
<json:string>mines deluc</json:string>
<json:string>sitzungsberichte kaiserlichen akademie</json:string>
<json:string>systematic order</json:string>
<json:string>modern discoveries</json:string>
<json:string>full description</json:string>
<json:string>science marvin</json:string>
<json:string>sein leben</json:string>
<json:string>seine werke</json:string>
<json:string>britannique pictet</json:string>
<json:string>association sears</json:string>
<json:string>sopra piogetta</json:string>
<json:string>iron grains</json:string>
<json:string>iron</json:string>
<json:string>franz</json:string>
</teeft>
</keywords>
<author>
<json:item>
<name>Ursula B. Marvin</name>
<affiliations>
<json:string>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</json:string>
<json:string>E-mail: umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</json:string>
</affiliations>
</json:item>
</author>
<articleId>
<json:string>MAPS606</json:string>
</articleId>
<language>
<json:string>eng</json:string>
</language>
<originalGenre>
<json:string>article</json:string>
</originalGenre>
<abstract>Abstract— In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book, Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.</abstract>
<qualityIndicators>
<score>8</score>
<pdfVersion>1.3</pdfVersion>
<pdfPageSize>612 x 792 pts (letter)</pdfPageSize>
<refBibsNative>true</refBibsNative>
<abstractCharCount>2948</abstractCharCount>
<pdfWordCount>47097</pdfWordCount>
<pdfCharCount>270764</pdfCharCount>
<pdfPageCount>66</pdfPageCount>
<abstractWordCount>459</abstractWordCount>
</qualityIndicators>
<title>Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
<genre>
<json:string>article</json:string>
</genre>
<host>
<title>Meteoritics & Planetary Science</title>
<language>
<json:string>unknown</json:string>
</language>
<doi>
<json:string>10.1111/(ISSN)1945-5100</json:string>
</doi>
<issn>
<json:string>1086-9379</json:string>
</issn>
<eissn>
<json:string>1945-5100</json:string>
</eissn>
<publisherId>
<json:string>MAPS</json:string>
</publisherId>
<volume>42</volume>
<issue>S9</issue>
<pages>
<first>B3</first>
<last>B68</last>
<total>66</total>
</pages>
<genre>
<json:string>journal</json:string>
</genre>
</host>
<categories>
<wos>
<json:string>science</json:string>
<json:string>geochemistry & geophysics</json:string>
</wos>
<scienceMetrix>
<json:string>natural sciences</json:string>
<json:string>earth & environmental sciences</json:string>
<json:string>geochemistry & geophysics</json:string>
</scienceMetrix>
</categories>
<publicationDate>2007</publicationDate>
<copyrightDate>2007</copyrightDate>
<doi>
<json:string>10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</json:string>
</doi>
<id>2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425</id>
<score>1</score>
<fulltext>
<json:item>
<extension>pdf</extension>
<original>true</original>
<mimetype>application/pdf</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425/fulltext/pdf</uri>
</json:item>
<json:item>
<extension>zip</extension>
<original>false</original>
<mimetype>application/zip</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425/fulltext/zip</uri>
</json:item>
<istex:fulltextTEI uri="https://api.istex.fr/document/2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425/fulltext/tei">
<teiHeader>
<fileDesc>
<titleStmt>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
</titleStmt>
<publicationStmt>
<authority>ISTEX</authority>
<publisher>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher>
<pubPlace>Oxford, UK</pubPlace>
<availability>
<p>2007 The Meteoritical Society</p>
</availability>
<date>2007</date>
</publicationStmt>
<sourceDesc>
<biblStruct type="inbook">
<analytic>
<title level="a" type="main" xml:lang="en">Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
<author xml:id="author-1">
<persName>
<forename type="first">Ursula B.</forename>
<surname>Marvin</surname>
</persName>
<email>umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</email>
<affiliation>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</affiliation>
</author>
</analytic>
<monogr>
<title level="j">Meteoritics & Planetary Science</title>
<idno type="pISSN">1086-9379</idno>
<idno type="eISSN">1945-5100</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1111/(ISSN)1945-5100</idno>
<imprint>
<publisher>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher>
<pubPlace>Oxford, UK</pubPlace>
<date type="published" when="2007-09"></date>
<biblScope unit="volume">42</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="issue">S9</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" from="B3">B3</biblScope>
<biblScope unit="page" to="B68">B68</biblScope>
</imprint>
</monogr>
<idno type="istex">2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425</idno>
<idno type="DOI">10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</idno>
<idno type="ArticleID">MAPS606</idno>
</biblStruct>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<profileDesc>
<creation>
<date>2007</date>
</creation>
<langUsage>
<language ident="en">en</language>
</langUsage>
<abstract>
<p>Abstract— In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book, Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.</p>
</abstract>
</profileDesc>
<revisionDesc>
<change when="2007-09">Published</change>
</revisionDesc>
</teiHeader>
</istex:fulltextTEI>
<json:item>
<extension>txt</extension>
<original>false</original>
<mimetype>text/plain</mimetype>
<uri>https://api.istex.fr/document/2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425/fulltext/txt</uri>
</json:item>
</fulltext>
<metadata>
<istex:metadataXml wicri:clean="Wiley, elements deleted: body">
<istex:xmlDeclaration>version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" standalone="yes"</istex:xmlDeclaration>
<istex:document>
<component version="2.0" type="serialArticle" xml:lang="en">
<header>
<publicationMeta level="product">
<publisherInfo>
<publisherName>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisherName>
<publisherLoc>Oxford, UK</publisherLoc>
</publisherInfo>
<doi origin="wiley" registered="yes">10.1111/(ISSN)1945-5100</doi>
<issn type="print">1086-9379</issn>
<issn type="electronic">1945-5100</issn>
<idGroup>
<id type="product" value="MAPS"></id>
<id type="publisherDivision" value="ST"></id>
</idGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="main" sort="METEORITICS AND PLANETARY SCIENCE">Meteoritics & Planetary Science</title>
</titleGroup>
</publicationMeta>
<publicationMeta level="part" position="09000">
<doi origin="wiley">10.1111/maps.2007.42.issue-S9</doi>
<numberingGroup>
<numbering type="journalVolume" number="42">42</numbering>
<numbering type="journalIssue">S9</numbering>
</numberingGroup>
<coverDate startDate="2007-09">September 2007</coverDate>
</publicationMeta>
<publicationMeta level="unit" type="article" position="1" status="forIssue">
<doi origin="wiley">10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</doi>
<idGroup>
<id type="unit" value="MAPS606"></id>
</idGroup>
<countGroup>
<count type="pageTotal" number="66"></count>
</countGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="tocHeading1">Original Article</title>
</titleGroup>
<copyright>2007 The Meteoritical Society</copyright>
<eventGroup>
<event type="firstOnline" date="2010-01-26"></event>
<event type="publishedOnlineFinalForm" date="2010-01-26"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:BPG_TO_WML3G version:2.3.6 mode:FullText source:HeaderRef result:HeaderRef" date="2010-04-21"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:WILEY_ML3G_TO_WILEY_ML3GV2 version:4.0.1" date="2014-03-20"></event>
<event type="xmlConverted" agent="Converter:WML3G_To_WML3G version:4.1.7 mode:FullText,remove_FC" date="2014-10-31"></event>
</eventGroup>
<numberingGroup>
<numbering type="pageFirst">B3</numbering>
<numbering type="pageLast">B68</numbering>
</numberingGroup>
<correspondenceTo>
<email>umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</email>
</correspondenceTo>
<linkGroup>
<link type="toTypesetVersion" href="file:MAPS.MAPS606.pdf"></link>
</linkGroup>
</publicationMeta>
<contentMeta>
<unparsedEditorialHistory>Received 7 February 2007; revision accepted 21 June 2007</unparsedEditorialHistory>
<countGroup>
<count type="referenceTotal" number="217"></count>
<count type="linksCrossRef" number="2"></count>
</countGroup>
<titleGroup>
<title type="main">Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
</titleGroup>
<creators>
<creator creatorRole="author" xml:id="cr1" affiliationRef="#a1" corresponding="yes">
<personName>
<givenNames>Ursula B.</givenNames>
<familyName>Marvin</familyName>
</personName>
</creator>
</creators>
<affiliationGroup>
<affiliation xml:id="a1" countryCode="US">
<unparsedAffiliation>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</unparsedAffiliation>
</affiliation>
</affiliationGroup>
<abstractGroup>
<abstract type="main" xml:lang="en">
<p>
<b>Abstract—</b>
In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book,
<i>Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen</i>
, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.</p>
</abstract>
</abstractGroup>
</contentMeta>
</header>
</component>
</istex:document>
</istex:metadataXml>
<mods version="3.6">
<titleInfo lang="en">
<title>Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
</titleInfo>
<titleInfo type="alternative" contentType="CDATA" lang="en">
<title>Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research</title>
</titleInfo>
<name type="personal">
<namePart type="given">Ursula B.</namePart>
<namePart type="family">Marvin</namePart>
<affiliation>Harvard‐Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA</affiliation>
<affiliation>E-mail: umarvin@cfa.harvard.edu</affiliation>
<role>
<roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm>
</role>
</name>
<typeOfResource>text</typeOfResource>
<genre type="article" displayLabel="article"></genre>
<originInfo>
<publisher>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</publisher>
<place>
<placeTerm type="text">Oxford, UK</placeTerm>
</place>
<dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">2007-09</dateIssued>
<edition>Received 7 February 2007; revision accepted 21 June 2007</edition>
<copyrightDate encoding="w3cdtf">2007</copyrightDate>
</originInfo>
<language>
<languageTerm type="code" authority="rfc3066">en</languageTerm>
<languageTerm type="code" authority="iso639-2b">eng</languageTerm>
</language>
<physicalDescription>
<internetMediaType>text/html</internetMediaType>
<extent unit="references">217</extent>
</physicalDescription>
<abstract>Abstract— In 1794, Ernst F. F. Chladni published a 63‐page book, Über den Ursprung der von Pallas gefundenen und anderer ihr änlicher Eisenmassen und üsber einige damit in Verbindung stehende Naturerscheinungen, in which he proposed that meteor‐stones and iron masses enter the atmosphere from cosmic space and form fireballs as they plunge to Earth. These ideas violated two strongly held contemporary beliefs: 1) fragments of rock and metal do not fall from the sky, and 2) no small bodies exist in space beyond the Moon. From the beginning, Chladni was severely criticized for basing his hypotheses on historical eyewitness reports of falls, which others regarded as folk tales, and for taking gross liberties with the laws of physics. Ten years later, the study of fallen stones and irons was established as a valid field of investigation. Today, some scholars credit Chladni with founding meteoritics as a science; others regard his contributions as scarcely worthy of mention. Writings by his contemporaries suggest that Chladni's book alone would not have led to changes of prevailing theories; thus, he narrowly escaped the fate of those scientists who propose valid hypotheses prematurely. However, between 1794 and 1798, four falls of stones were witnessed and widely publicized. There followed a series of epoch‐making analyses of fallen stones and “native irons” by the chemist Edward C. Howard and the mineralogist Jacques‐Louis de Bournon. They showed that all the stones were much alike in texture and composition but significantly different from the Earth's known crustal rocks. Of primary importance was Howard's discovery of nickel in the irons and the metal grains of the stones. This linked the two as belonging to the same natural phenomenon. These chemical results, published in February 1802, persuaded some of the leading scientists in England, France, and Germany that bodies do fall from the sky. Within a few months, chemists in France reported similar results and a new field of study was inaugurated internationally, although opposition lingered on until April 1803, when nearly 3,000 stones fell at L'Aigle in Normandy and transformed the last skeptics into believers. Chladni immediately received full credit for his hypothesis of falls, but decades passed before his linking of falling bodies with fireballs received general acceptance. His hypothesis of their origin in cosmic space met with strong resistance from those who argued that stones formed within the Earth's atmosphere or were ejected by lunar volcanoes. After 1860, when both of these hypotheses were abandoned, there followed a century of debate between proponents of an interstellar versus a planetary origin. Not until the 1950s did conclusive evidence of their elliptical orbits establish meteorite parent bodies as members of the solar system. Thus, nearly 200 years passed before the questions of origin that Chladni raised finally were resolved.</abstract>
<relatedItem type="host">
<titleInfo>
<title>Meteoritics & Planetary Science</title>
</titleInfo>
<genre type="journal">journal</genre>
<identifier type="ISSN">1086-9379</identifier>
<identifier type="eISSN">1945-5100</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1111/(ISSN)1945-5100</identifier>
<identifier type="PublisherID">MAPS</identifier>
<part>
<date>2007</date>
<detail type="volume">
<caption>vol.</caption>
<number>42</number>
</detail>
<detail type="issue">
<caption>no.</caption>
<number>S9</number>
</detail>
<extent unit="pages">
<start>B3</start>
<end>B68</end>
<total>66</total>
</extent>
</part>
</relatedItem>
<identifier type="istex">2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425</identifier>
<identifier type="DOI">10.1111/j.1945-5100.2007.tb00606.x</identifier>
<identifier type="ArticleID">MAPS606</identifier>
<accessCondition type="use and reproduction" contentType="copyright">2007 The Meteoritical Society</accessCondition>
<recordInfo>
<recordContentSource>WILEY</recordContentSource>
<recordOrigin>Blackwell Publishing Ltd</recordOrigin>
</recordInfo>
</mods>
</metadata>
<serie></serie>
</istex>
</record>

Pour manipuler ce document sous Unix (Dilib)

EXPLOR_STEP=$WICRI_ROOT/Wicri/Sarre/explor/MusicSarreV3/Data/Istex/Corpus
HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_STEP/biblio.hfd -nk 000466 | SxmlIndent | more

Ou

HfdSelect -h $EXPLOR_AREA/Data/Istex/Corpus/biblio.hfd -nk 000466 | SxmlIndent | more

Pour mettre un lien sur cette page dans le réseau Wicri

{{Explor lien
   |wiki=    Wicri/Sarre
   |area=    MusicSarreV3
   |flux=    Istex
   |étape=   Corpus
   |type=    RBID
   |clé=     ISTEX:2D866B208050337E65EF0C741F6B2C4B6E1B1425
   |texte=   Ernst Florens Friedrich Chladni (1756–1827) and the origins of modern meteorite research
}}

Wicri

This area was generated with Dilib version V0.6.33.
Data generation: Sun Jul 15 18:16:09 2018. Site generation: Tue Mar 5 19:21:25 2024