Willamette MeteoriteThe Willamette Meteorite is the largest meteorite ever found in the United States, and the sixth largest in the world. It is an iron-nickel meteorite. It had been known to the natives for a long time (no crater has been found), but was discovered by European immigrants in 1902. It is known as Tomanowos to the Clackamas Indians of the modern-day Confederated Tribes of the Grand Ronde to whom it originally belonged. It is believed to have landed in Canada, and thousands of years ago glaciers pushed it to Oregon's Willamette Valley. Its pits were caused not by a flaming descent through the atmosphere, but by centuries of rusting in the wet forest of Oregon. It was discovered in the Willamette Valley of Oregon at 45°22'N , 122°35'W, by the modern city of West Linn, Oregon. It weighs over 14,000 kg (about 32,000 pounds) and is the rough size of a Volkswagon Beetle. Parts have been sliced off. The meteorite has been subject to some controversy. When some European settlers discovered it, it was on land owned by the Oregon Iron and Steel Company. The settlers ghosted it off, and a messy lawsuit ensued (usgennet.org reference, below). It was later donated to the American Museum of Natural History in New York City in 1906. With time there grew greater sensitivity to the natives to whom it originally belonged. The museum was built around the meteorite, but to remove it would damage the museum. There is now an agreement between the tribe and the museum, and once a year tribal members may conduct a private ceremony. It remains in New York. External links and references
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