:''For other persons named Daniel Barringer, see
Daniel Barringer.''
'Daniel Moreau Barringer' (
1860 –
1929) is best known for being the first person to prove the existence of a
meteorite crater on Earth, the
Barringer Meteorite Crater, or Meteor Crater, in Arizona.
Daniel Barringer, the son of
Daniel Moreau Barringer and nephew of
Rufus Barringer, graduated from
Princeton University in
1879 at the age of 19, and in 1882 graduated from the
University of Pennsylvania's Law School. He later studied
geology and
mineralogy at
Harvard University and the
University of Virginia respectively.
In 1892 Barringer, along with his friend Richard A. F. Penrose, Jr. and others, purchased a
gold and
silver mine near
Cochise, Arizona. Later he discovered the Commonwealth Silver Mine in
Pearce, Arizona. These mining ventures left him a wealthy man.
In
1902 Barringer learned of the existence of a large (1.5 km in diameter) crater, located 35 miles east of
Flagstaff, Arizona. The crater, known as Coon Mountain, had previously been studied by the geologist
Grove Karl Gilbert in
1891. Gilbert had hypothesized that the crater must have been the result of either a gas explosion or a
meteorite. After performing experiments in the crater, however, Gilbert concluded that the crater could not be the result of an impact, and therefore could only be the result of an explosion. He concluded this despite the clear presence of small meteoritic particles in the vicinity of the crater.
Upon hearing of the existence of the crater and the meteoritic iron, Barringer became convinced that the crater was of meteoritic origin. With both scientific and monetary aims in mind, Barringer created the
Standard Iron Company in order to mine the crater for the iron that he assumed must be buried under the surface.
The Standard Iron Company conducted drilling operations in and around the crater between
1903 and
1905, and concluded that the crater had indeed been caused by a violent impact. They were unable to find the meteorite, however.
In 1906 Barringer and his partner, the
mathematician and
physicist Benjamin C. Tilghman, presented their first papers to the
U.S. Geological Survey outlining the evidence in support of the impact theory. The papers were published in the ''Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences'' in
Philadelphia.
The mining of the crater continued until
1929 without ever finding the ten-million ton meteorite that Barringer assumed must be hidden. At this time the
astronomer Forest Ray Moulton performed calculations on the energy expended by the meteorite on impact, and concluded that the meteorite had most likely vaporized when it landed. By this point Barringer had spent over $600,000 in mining the crater, nearly bankrupting him, with no iron profits to show for it.
Barringer died of a heart attack on
November 30,
1929, shortly after reading the very persuasive arguments that no iron was to be found.
By the time of his death, Barringer had convinced most of the scientific community that his impact theory was correct. The theory has been further confirmed with new evidence since then, most notably by
Eugene Shoemaker in the
1960s.
Barringer had
a small crater named after him posthumously on the far side of the
Moon. He was survived by his wife, Margaret Bennett, and eight children, who, together with their descendants, formed the Barringer Crater Company, which owns the site to this day.
See also
★ The
Meteor Crater
★
Impact crater
References and external links
★ Coon Mountain Controversies, William Hoyt, 1987.
★ http://www.barringercrater.com
★ http://www.meteorcrater.com