| Willamette | |
|---|---|
Willamette Meteorite at theAmerican Museum of Natural History | |
| Type | Iron |
| Structural classification | Mediumoctahedrite |
| Group | IIIAB |
| Composition | 91%Fe, 7.62%Ni, 18.6ppmGa, 37.3ppmGe, 4.7ppmIr |
| Country | United States |
| Region | Oregon |
| Coordinates | 45°22′N122°35′W / 45.367°N 122.583°W /45.367; -122.583[1] |
| Observed fall | No |
| Found date | Unknown; by 1902 |
| TKW | 14,150 kilograms (15.60 short tons)[2] |
TheWillamette Meteorite, officially namedWillamette[3] and originally known asTomanowos by theClackamas Chinook[4][5] Native American tribe, is aniron-nickel meteorite found in theU.S. state ofOregon.
It is the largestmeteorite found in theUnited States.[6]
It was discovered in 1902 and for a long time it was seen as the sixth largest meteor in the world.[7][8] However, with new samples such as El Ali andGancedo being discovered, the Willamette is no longer in the top ten largest meteors in the world.[9][10]
There was noimpact crater at the discovery site; researchers believe the meteorite landed in what is nowCanada orMontana, and was transported as aglacial erratic to theWillamette Valley during theMissoula Floods at the end of the last Ice Age (~13,000 years ago).[11] It has long been held sacred by indigenous peoples of the Willamette Valley, including the federally recognizedConfederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon (CTGR).
The meteorite is on display at theAmerican Museum of Natural History inNew York City, which acquired it in 1906.[8] Having been seen by an estimated 40 million people over the years, and given its striking appearance, it is among the most famous meteorites.[12][13][14] In 2005, the CTGR sued to have the meteorite returned to their control, ultimately reaching an agreement that gave the tribe access to the meteorite while allowing the museum to keep it as long as they are exhibiting it.[13][15]

The Willamette Meteorite weighs about 34,200 pounds (15,500 kg). It is classified as atype III iron meteorite, being composed of over 91%iron and 7.62%nickel, with traces ofcobalt andphosphorus. The approximate dimensions of the meteorite are 10 feet (3 m) tall by 6.5 feet (2 m) wide by 4.25 feet (1.3 m) deep. Most iron meteorites like Willamette have originated from the differentiated core ofplanetesimals orasteroids that collided with another object. Willamette has a recrystallized structure with only traces of a mediumWidmanstätten pattern; the result of a significant impact-heating event on the parent body.[8][16] The Willamette Meteorite contains higher concentrations of various metals that are quite rare in Earth's crust. For example,iridium, one of the least abundant elements in Earth's crust, is found in the Willamette Meteorite at a concentration of 4.7 ppm, thousands of times more concentrated than in the Earth's crust.[17]

The lack of animpact crater at the discovery site was only explained after the 1920s, with the new understanding about theMissoula Floods, one of the largest floods documented. These floods were caused by the collapse of an ice barrier during the last deglaciation.
The meteorite presumably landed on an ice cap in what is nowMontana or westernCanada, and was dragged by the glacier ice to the vicinity of an ice barrier that formed across theClark Fork River. This barrier had ponded a huge amount of water atLake Missoula right at the time when the meteorite reached the area and the ice barrier became unstable and was breached. The resulting flood involved up to 10 million cubic metres (350 million cubic feet) per second of water discharge, with large blocks of ice rafting down theColumbia River and theWillamette Valley at the end of the last Ice Age (~13,000 years ago).[11] Some of these ice rafts included boulders (known as 'glacial erratic' by geologists) like the Willamette meteorite, which eventually sank in the flood waters and settled where they were found by humans.
The deep crevasses of the meteorite resulted from both its high-speed atmospheric entry and its subsequent weathering. Exposed to the elements for thousands of years, rainwater interacted with the mineraltroilite, resulting in a form ofsulfuric acid which slowly dissolved portions of the meteorite. This resulted in the gradual development of the hollows that are visible today.
In 1902, Ellis Hughes was the first European settler to recognize the meteorite's significance.[18] At that time, the land was owned by theOregon Iron and Steel Company. Hughes attempted to claim ownership of the meteorite, and secretly moved it to his own land. This involved 90 days of hard work to cover the3⁄4 mile (1,200 m) distance. The move was discovered, and after a lawsuit, theOregon Supreme Court held that Oregon Iron and Steel Company was the legal owner.[19][20]

In 1905, Sarah Tappan Hoadley, wife ofWilliam E. Dodge Jr., purchased the meteorite for $26,000 ($909,904 in2024). After displaying it at theLewis and Clark Centennial Exposition,[21][22] she donated it to theAmerican Museum of Natural History in New York City,[23] where it has been on display since 1906.[24]
In 1998, museum curators cut a 28-pound (13 kg) section from the crown of the meteorite.[25] That section was traded to a private collector for a one-half-ounce (14 g) piece of aMartian meteorite.[25][26]
In 1999, theConfederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde Community of Oregon (CTGR), a confederation ofNative American tribes, demanded that it be returned and filed an action pursuant to theNative American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA) against the American Museum of Natural History. In response, the Museum filed a federal lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment against the CTGR in 2000. An agreement with the Museum was reached later that year in which the meteorite would remain at the museum with tribal members being able to conduct a private ceremony around the meteorite once a year, and that ownership will be transferred to CTGR should the museum cease to have the meteorite on display.[15]
In 2006, a 4.5-ounce (130 g), 7.5-inch (19 cm) piece of the meteorite, derived from the above noted crown section, was purchased at auction and was displayed at theEvergreen Aviation & Space Museum inMcMinnville, Oregon, until it was returned to the CTGR on February 22, 2019.[27][28][29]
In early 2007, in response to a student's request,RepresentativeJohn Lim introduced a resolution that would demand that the museum return the meteorite to Oregon. The tribes said they were not consulted, they did not support the resolution, and were content with the current arrangement with the museum.[30]
In October 2007, plans to auction the crown section led to claims by the CTGR of insensitivity.[26][31] Bidders dropped out when an editorial in the PortlandOregonian newspaper asserted the CTGR would file a lawsuit against the new owner, but the CTGR disavowed the editorial and said they had no such intent, and that they could not stop the sale. While the newspaper printed an apology, the specimen was withdrawn.[32][33][34] A lawsuit was filed against the newspaper in Oregon Circuit Court and failed.[35]

Different sources report different weights of the Willamette Meteorite, ranging from 15,500 kilograms (34,200 lb)[36] to 12,700 kilograms (28,000 lb).[37] Circa 2008, pages of the American Museum of Natural History website stated both "15.5 tons"[38] and "14 tons".[39][40] There are differences between themetric ton (1,000 kilograms, 2,204.6 lb),short ton (2,000 pounds, 907.18 kg), andlong ton (2,240 pounds, 1,016.0 kg), each of which may simply be called a "ton". In 1906, the American Museum of Natural History stated that the weight of the meteorite was "at least 31,200 pounds, or about 15.6 tons",[2] consistent with American usage of "ton" usually meaning the short ton. As of 2023[update], the American Museum of Natural History website gives the weight as "15.5 tons".[41]
An inexact replica, known asBrown and Black Asteroid, is on display inEugene, Oregon, outside theUniversity of Oregon Museum of Natural and Cultural History on theUniversity of Oregon campus.[42]
A one-fifth-size replica stands in Fields Bridge Park inWest Linn, Oregon.[43][44]
The only exact replica of the meteorite was created circa 2018 by Garrick Imatani, an artist and assistant professor atSouthern Oregon University, through a process involvingphotogrammetry of the original at the American Museum of Natural History, via cooperation with the CTGR, and3D printing.[45] Imatani also created an interpretation of the meteorite that is on permanent display at the University of Oregon in Straub Hall.[46][47]
republished from the original