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Texas Science and Natural History Museum

Coordinates: 30°17′13″N 97°43′57″W / 30.2870°N 97.7324°W / 30.2870; -97.7324
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Texas Memorial Museum
File:Texas Memorial Museum.jpg
Map
Established1939
Location2400 Trinity Street
Austin, Texas
Coordinates30°17′13″N 97°43′57″W / 30.2870°N 97.7324°W / 30.2870; -97.7324
TypeNatural history museum
OwnerUniversity of Texas at Austin
Websitetmm.utexas.edu

The Texas Memorial Museum, located on the campus of the University of Texas at Austin in Austin, Texas, USA, was created during preparations for the Texas Centennial Exposition held in 1936. The museum's focus is on natural history, including paleontology, geology, biology, herpetology, ichthyology and entomology. At one point, the museum also had exhibits on Texas history, anthropology, geography, and ethnography, but these were relocated to other museums (including the Bullock Texas State History Museum) in 2001.

The building was designed in the Art Deco style by John F. Staub, with Paul Cret as supervising architect. Ground was broken for the building by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in January 1936.[1] The museum was opened on January 15, 1939.

The museum won "Best of Austin" awards from the Austin Chronicle in 2002 and 2005.[2]

In October 2013, Linda Hicke, the dean of Austin's College of Natural Sciences, cut the museum's funding by $400,000 and transferred ownership to the American Legion Texas Branch. The staff was reduced from twelve employees to three: a security guard, a gift shop operator and one other employee.[3]

Wichita County Meteorite

Wichita County Meteorite: 2 feet long by 1 foot wide by 4-8 inches thick
Note the location of Rio Fierro in the top center.[4]

In 1723, the Comanche defeated the Lipan Apache people in a nine-day battle along the Rio del Fierro (Wichita River).[5][6] The River of Iron may be the location written about by Athanase De Mezieres in 1772, containing "a mass of metal which the Indians say is hard, thick, heavy, and composed of iron", which they "venerate...as an extraordinary manifestation of nature", the Comanche's calling it "Ta-pic-ta-carre [standing rock], Po-i-wisht-carre [standing metal], or Po-a-cat-le-pi-le-carre [medicine rock]", the general area containing a "large number of meteoric masses".[7][8]

"According to the Indians, the mass was first discovered by the Spaniards, who made several ineffectual attempts to remove it on pack mules but were finally compelled to abandon it on account of its great weight. The Comanches at first endeavored to melt the mass by building large fires around it, but failing in this, they next attempted to break it in pieces, in which they were likewise unsuccessful; they then conceived the idea that it was a wonderful medicine stone and therefore worthy of their most profound regard...it was the custom of all who passed by to deposit upon it beads, arrowheads, tobacco, and other articles as offerings."[9]

The Wichita County meteorite originally weighed 145 kg and was obtained by Major Robert Neighbors,[10] US Indian agent at Fort Belknap, in 1858-1859, who presented it to the State Cabinet, and was displayed in the old Capitol building before it burned down, when this Coarse Octahedrite was turned over to the University of Texas.[11] According to Neighbors, "When the meteorite was conveyed to the Indian reserve, the Comanches collected in great numbers around their valued medicine stone and, whilst manifesting their attachment by rubbing their arms, hands, and chests over it, earnestly besought Major Neighbors to permit them to keep it at the agency."[12]

A sister meteorite weighing 742 kg, the Red River meteorite, was discovered in 1808[13] but this Medium Octahedrite now resides in the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History.[14]

Relief from western facade of the museum, sculpted by William McVey

References

  1. ^ UT Austin - VRC - Highlights Archived 2005-02-14 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ Awards Received - Texas Memorial Museum
  3. ^ Green, Anthony (2013-10-29). "On-campus museum set to lose $400,000 in funding". The Daily Texan. Retrieved 2018-07-23.
  4. ^ Urrutia, Lafora and Ruby, 1769, Map of Frontier, US Library of Congress
  5. ^ Dunn, W. E., 1911, Apache Relations in Texas, 1718-1750, in the Texas Historical Association Quarterly, Vol. 14, No. 3, p. 220
  6. ^ Bolton, H. E., 1914, Athanase de Menzieres and the Louisiana-Texas Frontier, 1768-1780, Volume 1, Cleveland: The Arthur H. Clark Company, pp. 24-25
  7. ^ Bolton, H. E., 1914, Athanase de Menzieres and the Louisiana-Texas Frontier, 1768-1780, Volume 1, Cleveland: The Arthur H. Clark Company, p. 296
  8. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 486
  9. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 486
  10. ^ Neighbors, K.F., 1975, Robert Neighbors and the Texas Frontier, 1836-1859, Waco: Texian Press, p. 65 and 172
  11. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 487
  12. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 486
  13. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 488
  14. ^ Farrington, O.C., 1909, Meteorites of North America, to January 1, 1909, National Academy of Sciences Volume XIII, p. 488