[172]. E. F. F. Chladni, “Neues Verzeichniss der herabgefallenen Stein- und Eisenmassen,” p. 17; Gilbert’s Annalen der Physik, vol. 1. (From copy having MS. notes and emendations by the author.)

[173]. Metallotheca Vaticana, Romæ, 1719, p. 248.

[174]. Ulyssis Aldrovandi, “Museum Metallicum,” pp. 528, 529.

[175]. Fundgruben des Orients, vol. iv, p. 282; Wien, 1814.

[176]. King, “Remarks Concerning Stones said to have Fallen from the Clouds,” London, 1796, p. 26.

[177]. Lieut. Robert E. Peary, “Northward over the ‘Great Ice,’” New York, 1897, vol. ii, pp. 553 sqq.

[178]. Edmund Otis Hovey, “The Foyer Collection of Meteorites,” American Museum of Natural History, Guide Leaflet No. 26, December, 1907, pp. 23–27.

[179]. Henry A. Ward, “Willamette Meteorite”; Proc. Rochester Acad. of Sc., vol. iv, pp. 137–148, plates 13–18.

[180]. Edmund Otis Hovey, “The Foyer Collection of Meteorites,” American Museum of Natural History, Guide Leaflet No. 26, December, 1907, pp. 27, 28.

[181]. See the present writer’s “Diamond and Moissanite; Natural, Artificial and Meteoric,” a lecture delivered at the Twelfth General Meeting of the American Electro-chemical Society in New York City, October 18, 1907; here the literature on this important meteor is fully given. Two other interesting meteorites are described by George F. Kunz and Ernest Weinschenk in the American Journal of Science, vol. xliii, May 1892, pp. 424–426, figures.