An Attempt to account for the Production
of a Shower of Stones, that fell in Tuscany, on
the 16th of June, 1794; and to shew that there are
Traces of similar Events having taken place, in the
highest Ages of Antiquity. In the course of
which Detail is also inserted, an Account of an
extraordinary Hail-stone, that fell, with many others,
in Cornwall, on the 20th of October, 1791.
Having received this last winter, from Sir Charles
Blagden, some very
curious manuscript accounts, concerning a surprising
shower of stones;
which is said, on the testimony of several persons,
to have fallen in
Tuscany, on the 16th of June, 1794; and
having also perused, with much
attention, a very interesting pamphlet, written in
Italian, by Abbate
Ambrose Soldani, Professor of mathematics, in
the University of Siena,
containing an extraordinary and full detail of such
facts as could be
collected relating to this shower; the whole has appeared
to me to
afford such an ample field for philosophical contemplation,
and also for
the illustration of antient historic facts; that (leaving
the whole to
rest upon such testimony as the learned Professor
has already collected
together; and to be supported by such further corroboration,
as I am
informed is likely soon to arrive in England,)
I cannot but think it
doing some service to the cause of literature, and
science, to give to
the world, in the earliest instance, a short abridgement
of the
substance of the whole of the information; expressed
in the most concise
and plainest language, in which it is possible for
me to convey a full
and exact idea of the phaenomenon.
It may be of some use, and afford satisfaction to
several curious
persons, to find the whole here compressed in so small
a compass.
And, as I shall add my own conclusions without reserve;
because the
whole of the phaenomenon tends greatly to confirm
some ideas which I had
previously been led to form, many years ago, concerning
the
consolidation of certain species of stone; it may
open a door for
further curious investigation.
And it may at least amuse, if not instruct; whilst
I add a short detail
of uncommon facts, recorded in antient history, and
tending to shew
clearly, that we are not without precedents of similar
events having
happened, in the early ages of antiquity.
On the 16th of June, 1794, a tremendous cloud was
seen in Tuscany, near
Siena, and Radacofani; coming from the north, about
seven o’clock in the
evening; sending forth sparks, like rockets; throwing
out smoke like a
furnace; rendering violent explosions,
and blasts, more like those of
cannon, and of numerous muskets, than like thunder; and
casting down to
the ground hot stones: whilst the lightning
that issued from the cloud
was remarkably red; and moved with less velocity
than usual.
The cloud appeared of different shapes; to persons
in different
situations; and remained suspended a long time:
but every where was
plainly seen to be burning, and smoking like a furnace.
And its original height, from a variety of circumstances
put together,
seems to have been much above the common region of
the clouds.
The testimony, concerning the falling of the stones
from it, appears to
be almost unquestionable: and is, evidently,
from different persons,
who had no communication with each other.
For first; the fall of four stones is precisely ascertained:
one of
which was of an irregular figure, with a point like
that of a
diamond; weighed five pounds and an half; and
had a vitriolic
smell. And another weighed three pounds
and an half; was black on the
outside, as if from smoke; and, internally,
seemed composed of matter
of the colour of ashes; in which were perceived
small spots of metals,
of gold and silver.
And, besides these, Professor Soldani of Siena, was
shewn about fifteen
others: the surfaces of which were glazed black,
like a sort of
varnish; resisted acids; and
were too hard to be scratched with the
point of a penknife.
Signior Andrew Montauli, who saw the cloud,
as he was travelling,
described it as appearing much above the common region
of the clouds;
and as being clearly discerned to be on fire; and
becoming white, by
degrees; not only where it had a communication, by
a sort of stream of
smoke and lightning, with a neighbouring similar cloud:
but also, at
last, in two-third parts of its whole mass, which
was originally black.
And yet he took notice, that it was not affected by
the rays of the sun,
though they shone full on its lower parts. And
he could discern as it
were the bason of a fiery furnace, in the cloud, having
a whirling
motion.
This curious observer gives an account also, of a
stone, which he was
assured fell from the cloud, at the feet of a farmer;
and was dug out of
the ground, into which it had penetrated. And
he says, that it was
about five inches long, and four broad; nearly square;
and polished:
black on the surface, as if smoked; but within, like
a sort of
sand-stone, with various small particles of iron,
and bright metallic
stars.
Other stones are described by him; which were said
to have fallen at the
same time: were triangular; and terminated in
a sort of (pyramidal) or
conical figure. And others were so small
as to weigh not more than an
ounce.
Professor Soldani saw another stone, said to have
fallen from the cloud,
which had the figure of a parallelopiped, blunted
at the angles; and was
as it were varnished, on the outside, with a black
crust; and quite
unlike any stones whatever of the soil of the country
where it had
fallen.
Two ladies being at Cozone, about 20 miles
from Siena, saw a number
of stones fall, with a great noise, in a neighbouring
meadow: one of
which, being soon after taken up by a young woman,
burnt her hand:
another burnt a countryman’s hat: and a
third was said to strike off the
branch of a mulberry tree; and to cause the tree to
wither.
Another stone, of about two ounces weight, fell near
a girl watching
sheep; a young person, whose veracity it is said could
not be
doubted. This stone, the Professor tells
us, is also a parallelopiped,
with the angles rounded; and its internal substance
is like that of the
others; only with more metallic spots; especially
when viewed with a
magnifying glass: and the black external crust
appears to be minutely
crystallized.
Many others, of a similar kind, were in the possession
of different
persons at Siena.
And besides the falling of these from the cloud, there
is described to
have been a fall of sand; seen by keepers of cattle
near Cozone,
together with the falling of what appeared like squibs;
and which proved
afterwards to be stones, of the sort just described,
weighing two or
three ounces: and some only a quarter of
an ounce.
Amongst other stones that fell; was one weighing two
pounds, and two
ounces; which was also an oblong parallelopiped, with
blunted angles,
(as they are called, but which I think meant plainly
prismatical
terminations, and are said to have been about an inch
in height;) and
this was most remarkable for having, a small circle,
or sort of belt
round it, in one part; wherein the black crust appeared
more smooth; and
shining like glass; as if that part had suffered a
greater degree of
heat than the rest.
Another, also, was no less remarkable, for having
many rounded cavities
on its surface: as if the stone had been struck
with small balls, whilst
it was forming; and before it was hardened; which
left their
impressions. And some appearances, of the
same kind, were found on one
of the four surfaces of another stone, in the possession
of Soldani.
On minute examination, the Professor found the stones
were composed of
blackish crystals, of different kinds; with
metallic or pyritical
spots, all united together by a kind of consolidated
ashes. And, on
polishing them, they appeared to have a ground of
a dark ash colour;
intermixed with cubical blackish crystals, and shining
pyritical specks,
of a silver and gold colour.
The conclusion which Professor Soldani evidently forms,
is; that the
stones were generated in the air, by a combination
of mineral
substances, which had risen somewhere or other,
AS EXHALATIONS, from
the earth: but, as he seems to think, not
from Vesuvius.
The names of many persons, besides those already referred
to, are
mentioned; who were eye witnesses to the fall of the
stones. And several
depositions were made, in a regular juridical
manner, to ascertain
the truth of the facts.
The space of ground, within which the stones fell,
was from three to
four miles.
The falling of them, was the very day after
the great eruption of
Vesuvius.
And the distance of the place, from Vesuvius, could
not be less than two
hundred miles, and seems to have been more.
Vesuvius is situated to the south of the spot:
and the cloud came
from the north; about thirteen, or at most
eighteen hours, after the
eruption.
Now, putting all these circumstances together, I cannot
but venture to
form a conclusion, somewhat different from Professor
Soldani’s; though
perfectly agreeing with his general principles.
From a course of observations, and inquiries, which
I have been led to
pursue, for a great many years: tending to elucidate
the history of
extraneous fossils, and of the deluge; I have long
been convinced, that
stones in general, and strata of rocks, of all kinds,
have been formed
by two very different operations of those elements,
which the wisdom,
and omnipotent hand of God, has ordained, and created.
The one, by means of fire: and the other,
by means of water.
And, of each sort, there are two subdivisions.
Of the stones, and rocks, formed by fire; there
are some, (besides
lavas,) whose component parts, having been previously
fused, and in a
melted state, did merely cool, and harden gradually.
And there are others; whose component parts, having
been fused, and in a
melted state, and having so become completely liquid;
did instantly, by
the operation of the powers of attraction,
become crystallized.
And, in like manner; of stones, and of strata of rocks,
formed by means
of water; there are some, which having
had their component parts
brought together, in a fluid state; did then merely
become gradually
settled; and by the power of attraction, and the mixture
of crystalline
particles, were hardened by degrees.
And there are others: which, having had their
component parts, in like
manner, brought together by water, did yet, on account
of the peculiar
nature, and more powerful attraction of those
parts, instantly
crystallize.
And both of stones, and of strata of rocks, formed
by fire; and of
stones, and of strata of rocks formed by means of
water; there are some
such, as have been slowly consolidated by the first
kind of operation;
namely by the gradual cooling or settling of the substances;
which yet
do contain imbedded in them, crystals formed by the
latter kind of
operation.
Instances of which, we seem to have, in some granites,
on the one
hand; and in some sorts of limestones on
the other.
To this I must add also; that there appear further,
to have been some
stones formed by a sort of precipitation:
much in the same manner as
Grew describes the kernels, and stones of
fruit to have been
hardened.
And I have met with many instances, wherein it appears
unquestionably,
that all these kind of processes in nature are going
on continually: and
that extraneous substances are actually inclosed,
and continually
inclosing, which could not be antediluvian;
but must have been
recent.
To these short premises, I must beg leave to add; that in two papers formerly
printed in the Philosophical Transactions,
I endeavoured, by
some very remarkable instances, to prove, that iron,
wherever it comes
into combination with any substances that are tending
to consolidation,
hastens the process exceedingly; and
also renders the hardness of the
body much greater.
And I have also endeavoured, elsewhere, to shew,
in consequence of
conclusions deduced from experiments of the most unquestionable
authority, that air, in its various shapes
and modifications, is
indeed itself the great consolidating fluid,
out of which solid bodies
are composed; and by means of which the various attractions
take place,
which form all the hard bodies, and visible substances
upon earth.
From all these premises then, it was impossible for
me not to be led to
conclude; that we have, in this august phaenomenon
of the fall of stones
from the clouds, in Tuscany, an obvious proof, as
it were before our
eyes, of the combined operation of those very powers,
and processes, to
which I have been alluding.
It is well known; that pyrites, which are composed
of iron, and
sulphur, and other adventitious matter, when laid
in heaps, and
moistened, will take fire.
It is also well known, that a mixture of pyrites of
almost any kind,
beaten small, and mixed with iron filings and water,
when buried in the
ground will take fire; and produce a sort of artificial
volcano. And,
surely then, wherever a vast quantity of such kind
of matter should at
any time become mixed together, as flying dust, or
ashes; and be by any
means condensed together, or compressed, the same
effect might be
produced, even in the atmosphere and air.
Instead, therefore, of having recourse to the supposition,
of the cloud
in Tuscany having been produced by any other kind
of exhalations from
the earth; we may venture to believe, that an immense
cloud of ashes,
mixed with pyritical dust, and with numerous particles
of iron, having
been projected from Vesuvius to a most prodigious
height, became
afterwards condensed in its descent; took
fire, both of itself, as well
as by means of the electric fluid it contained; produced
many
explosions; melted the pyritical, and metallic,
and argillaceous
particles, of which the ashes were composed; and,
by this means, had a
sudden crystallization, and consolidation of those
particles taken
place, which formed the stones of various sizes, that
fell to the
ground: but did not harden the clayey ashes
so rapidly as the metallic
particles crystallized; and, therefore, gave an
opportunity for
impressions to be made on the surfaces of some
of the stones, as they
fell, by means of the impinging of the others.
Nor does it appear to me, to be any solid objection
to this conclusion,
either that Vesuvius was so far distant; or that the
cloud came from the
north.
For, if we examine Sir William Hamiltons account of the very eruption in
question, we shall find, that he had reason
to conclude, that the
pine-like cloud of ashes projected from Vesuvius,
at one part of the
time during this eruption, was twenty-five or thirty
miles in height;
and, if to this conclusion we add, not only that some
ashes actually
were carried to a greater distance than two hundred
miles; but
that, when any substance is at a vast height in the
atmosphere, a very
small variation of the direction of its course, causes
a most prodigious
variation in the extent of the range of ground where
it shall fall;
(just as the least variation in the angle, at the
vertex of an
isosceles triangle, causes a very great alteration
in the extent of
its base;) we may easily perceive, not only the possibility,
but the
probability, that the ashes in question, projected
to so vast an height,
were first carried even beyond Siena in Tuscany,
northward; and then
brought back, by a contrary current of wind, in the
direction in which
they fell.
Sir William Hamilton himself formed somewhat this sort of conclusion, on
receiving the first intimation of this shower of stones from the Earl of
Bristol.
I cannot therefore but allow my own conclusion to
carry conviction with
it to my own mind; and to send it forth into the world;
as a ground, at
least, for speculation, and reflection, to the minds
of others.
That ashes, and sand, and pyritical and sulphureous
dust, mixed with
metallic particles from volcanoes; fit for the instantaneous
crystallization, and consolidation of such bodies
as we have been
describing, are often actually floating in the atmosphere,
at incredible
distances from volcanoes, and more frequently than
the world are at all
aware of, is manifest from several well attested facts.
On the 26th of December, 1631, Captain Badily,
being in the Gulph of
Volo, in the Archipelago, riding at anchor, about
ten o’clock at night,
it began to rain sand and ashes; and
continued to do so till two
o’clock the next morning. The ashes lay
about two inches thick on the
deck: so that they cast them overboard just as
they had done snow the
day before. There was no wind stirring, when
the ashes fell: and yet
this extraordinary shower was not confined merely
to the place where
Badily’s ship was; but, as it appeared
afterwards, was extended so
widely to other parts, that ships coming from St.
John d’Acre to that
port, being at the distance of one hundred leagues
from thence, were
covered with the same sort of ashes. And no possible
account could be
given of them, except that they might come from Vesuvius.
On the 23d of October, 1755, a ship belonging to a
merchant of Leith, bound for Charles Town, in Carolina, being betwixt Shetland
and Iceland, and about twenty-five leagues distant from the former, and
therefore about three hundred miles from the latter, a shower of dust fell in
the night upon the decks.
In October, 1762, at Detroit, in America, was
a most surprising
darkness, from day-break till four in the afternoon,
during which time
some rain falling, brought down, with the drops, sulphur and dirt; which
rendered white paper black, and when burned fizzed like wet gunpowder: and whence such matter could originally
be brought,
appeared to be past all conjecture, unless it came
so far off as from
the volcano in Guadaloupe.
Condamine says, the ashes of the volcano of Sangay,
in South America,
sometimes pass over the provinces of Maca, and Quito; and are even carried as
far as Guayaquil.
And Hooke says, that on occasion of a great explosion
from a volcano,
in the island of Ternata, in the East Indies, there
followed so great a
darkness, that the inhabitants could not see each
other the next day:
and he justly leads us to infer what an immense quantity
of ashes must,
by this means, have been showered down somewhere on
the sea; because at
Mindanao, an hundred miles off, all the land
was covered with ashes a
foot thick.
And now, I must add; that such kind of falling
of stones from the
clouds, as has been described to have happened
in Tuscany, seems to
have happened also in very remote ages, of which we
are not without
sufficient testimony; and such as well deserves to
be allowed and
considered, on the present occasion; although the
knowledge of the facts
was, at first, in days of ignorance and gross darkness,
soon perverted
to the very worst purposes.
In the Acts of the holy Apostles, we read, that the
chief magistrate, at
Ephesus, begun his harangue to the people,
by saying, “Ye men of
Ephesus, what man is there that knoweth not how
that the City of the
Ephesians is a worshipper of the great goddess Diana,
and of the IMAGE
which fell down from Jupiter?” (or rather,
as the original Greek has
it) “of THAT which fell down from
Jupiter?” And the learned
Greaves leads us to conclude this image of
Diana to have been nothing
but a conical, or pyramidal stone, that fell from the clouds. For he
tells us, on unquestionable authorities, that many
others of the
images of heathen deities were merely such.
Herodian expressly declares, that the Phoenicians
had no statue of
the sun, polished by hand, to express an image; but
only had a certain
great stone, circular below, and ending with a
sharpness above, in the
figure of a cone, of black colour. And they report
it to have fallen
from heaven, and to be the image of the sun.
So Tacitus says, that at Cyprus, the image of
Venus was not of human
shape; but a figure rising continually round, from
a larger bottom to a
small top, in conical fashion. And it is
to be remarked, that Maximus
Tyrius (who perhaps was a more accurate mathematician,)
says, the stone
was pyramidal.
And in Corinth, we are told by Pausanias,
that the images both of
Jupiter Melichius, and of Diana, were
made (if made at all by hand)
with little or no art. The former being represented
by a pyramid, the
latter by a column.
Clemens Alexandrinus was so well acquainted with these facts, that he
even concludes the worship of such stones to have
been the first, and
earliest idolatry, in the world.
It is hard to conceive how mankind should ever have
been led to so
accursed an abomination, as the worship of stocks,
and stones, at all:
but, as far as any thing so horrid is to be accounted
for, there is no
way so likely of rendering a possible account; as
that of concluding,
that some of these pyramidal stones, at least, like
the image of
Diana, actually did fall, in the earliest ages,
from the clouds; in
the same manner as these pyramidal stones fell, in
1794, in Tuscany.
Plutarch, it is well known, mentions a stone
which formerly fell
from the clouds, in Thrace, and which Anaxagoras fancied to have
fallen from the sun.
And it is very remarkable, that the old writer, from
whom Plutarch had
his account, described the cloud, from which this
stone was said to
fall, in a manner (if we only make some allowance
for a little
exaggeration in barbarous ages,) very similar to Soldani’s
account of
the cloud in Tuscany. It hovered about
for a long time; seemed to throw
out splinters, which flew about, like wandering stars,
before they fell;
and at last it cast down to the earth a stone of extraordinary
size.
Pliny, who tells us that not only the remembrance
of this event, but
that the stone itself was preserved to his days, says,
it was of a dark
burnt colour. And though he does indeed speak
of it as being of an
extravagant weight and size, in which circumstance
perhaps he was
misled: yet he mentions another of a moderate
size, which fell in
Abydos, and was become an object of idolatrous
worship in that place;
as was still another, of the same sort, at
Potidaea.
Livy, who like Herodotus, has been oftentimes
censured as too
credulous, and as a relater of falsehoods, for preserving
traditions of
an extraordinary kind; which, after all, in ages of more enlarged
information, have proved to have been founded in truth; describes a
fall of stones to have happened on mount Alba,
during the reign of
Tullus Hostilius, (that is about 652 years
before the Christian aera),
in words that exactly convey an idea of just such
a phaenomenon, as this
which has so lately been observed in Tuscany.
He says, the senate were told, that lapidibus pluisse, it had rained
stones. And, when they doubted of the fact; and sent to inquire; they were
assured that stones had actually fallen; and had fallen just as hail does, which
is concreted in a storm.
He mentions also shortly another shower of stones, A. C. 202, and still a
third, which must have happened about the
year 194 before the
Christian aera.
Such are the records of antient history. And
in Holy Writ also a
remembrance of similar events is preserved.
For when the royal Psalmist says, “The
Lord also thundered out of
heaven, and the Highest gave his thunder: hail-stones,
AND COALS OF
FIRE,” the latter expression, in
consistency with common sense, and
conformably to the right meaning of language, cannot
but allude to some
such phaenomenon as we have been describing.
And especially, as in the
cautious translation of the seventy, a Greek word
is used, which
decidedly means real hard substances made red hot;
and not mere
appearances of fire or flame.
Whilst therefore, with the same sacred writer,
we should be led to
consider all these powerful operations, as the works
of God; Who
casteth forth his ice like morsels; and should
be led to consider
“fire and hail, snow and vapours, wind and
storm as fulfilling his
word;" we should also be led to perceive,
that the objections to
Holy Writ, founded on a supposed impossibility
of the truth of what is
written in the book of Joshua, concerning
the stones that fell
from heaven, on the army of the Canaanites; are only
founded in
ignorance, and error.
And much more should we be led to do so; when, to
these observations,
and testimonies, concerning showers of hot burning
stones, is added the
consideration; that within the short period of our
own lives, incredibly
large real hail-stones, formed of consolidated
ice; of ice
consolidated in the atmosphere, have fallen both
in France, and in
England.
In France, on the 13th of July in the year 1788; of
which it is well
known there has been a printed account: and concerning
which it is said,
and has been confirmed, on good authority, that some
of the stones
weighed three pounds: whilst others have been
said to weigh even five
pounds.
And in England, on the 20th of October, 1791, in Cornwall.
Of one of the hail-stones of this latter, minor storm,
I have had an
opportunity of obtaining, by the favour of a friend,
an exact model in
glass; whereof I now add an engraving.
This stone fell, with thousands of others of the same
kind, near
Menabilly, the seat of Philip Rashleigh,
Esq.; well known for his
science, and attention to whatever is curious; who
having great copper
works, and many ingenious miners, and workmen, on
his estate, and
directly under his eye; caused it to be instantly
picked up: and having
then, himself, first traced both its top, and bottom,
upon paper; and
having measured its thickness in every part, with
a pair of compasses;
caused a very exact mould to be formed: and afterwards,
in that mould,
had this model cast in glass: wherein, also,
the appearances of the
imbedded, common, small, roundish hail-stones, are
seen transparently;
just as they appeared in the great hail-stone itself
originally.
Whilst Mr. Rashleigh was taking the measures, it melted
so fast, that he
could not, in the end, take the exact weight,
as he fully intended to
have done. But as this model in glass weighs
exactly 1 ounce, 16
pennyweights, 23 grains, we may fairly conclude, that
the hail-stone
itself weighed much above half an ounce.
For it is well known, that the specific gravity of common glass, of which
sort this model is made, is to that of water, as 2.620 to 1.000. And the
specific gravity of common water, is to ice, as 8 to 7. And
computing according to this standard, I make the exact
weight of the
hail-stone to have been 295 grains.
From the singular manner in which the small, prior,
common hail-stones
appear to have been imbedded in this larger one, whilst
they were
falling to the earth; there is reason to be convinced,
that it was
formed in the atmosphere, by a sudden extraordinary
congelation almost
instantaneously, out of rain suddenly condensed,
which was mingled with
the common hail.
And it was very remarkable, that its dissolution,
and melting, also, was
much more rapid than that of the common small white
hail-stones: as was
the case, in like manner, with the other numerous
large ones.
Perhaps it ought to be here added: that
on the 18th of May, in the year
1680, some hail-stones are recorded to have fallen
in London, near
Gresham college, which were seen and examined
by the celebrated Dr.
Hooke; and were some of them not less than two
inches over, and others
three inches.
This which fell in Cornwall was only about one inch
and three quarters
long; an inch, or in some parts an inch and a quarter
broad; and between
half an inch, and three quarters of an inch thick.
And its weight was
near an ounce. How much more tremendous
then were those others, that
have been described as having fallen in France? the
accounts of some of
them may very probably have been exaggerated:
but the reality was
nevertheless as wonderful, surely, as any thing related
concerning the
ages of antiquity.
A proneness to credulity is ever blameable. And
it is very possible,
that sometimes, in a very wonderful narration, a jest
may be intended to
be palmed upon the world, instead of any elucidation
of truth. But
facts, positively affirmed, should be hearkened
to with patience: and,
at least, so far recorded, as to give an opportunity
of verifying
whether similar events do afterwards happen; and of
comparing such
events one with another.
To what has been said, therefore, concerning the fall
of stones in
Tuscany, and concerning these strange showers of hail,
in France, and in
England, it might perhaps too justly be deemed an
unwarrantable
omission, on this occasion, not to mention the very
strange fact that
is affirmed to have happened the last year, near the
Wold Cottage in
Yorkshire.
I leave the fact to rest on the support of the testimonies
referred to
in the printed paper, which is in so many persons’
hands; and that is
given to those who have the curiosity to examine the
stone itself, now
exhibiting in London; and shall only relate
the substance of the
account shortly, as it is given to us.
In the afternoon of the 13th of December, 1795, near
the Wold Cottage,
noises were heard in the air, by various persons,
like the report of a
pistol; or of guns at a distance at sea; though there
was neither any
thunder or lightning at the time: two distinct
concussions of the earth
were said to be perceived: and an hissing
noise, was also affirmed to
be heard by other persons, as of something passing
through the air; and
a labouring man plainly saw (as we are told) that
something was so
passing; and beheld a stone, as it seemed, at last,
(about ten yards, or
thirty feet, distant from the ground) descending,
and striking into the
ground, which flew up all about him: and in falling,
sparks of fire,
seemed to fly from it.
Afterwards he went to the place, in company with others;
who had
witnessed part of the phaenomena, and dug the stone
up from the place,
where it was buried about twenty-one inches deep.
It smelt, (as it is said,) very strongly of sulphur,
when it was dug up:
and was even warm, and smoked: it was found
to be thirty inches in
length, and twenty-eight and a half inches in breadth.
And it weighed
fifty-six pounds.
Such is the account. I affirm nothing. Neither
do I pretend either
absolutely to believe: or to disbelieve. I
have not an opportunity to
examine the whole of the evidence. But
it may be examined: and so I
leave it to be.
This, however, I will say: that first
I saw a fragment of this stone;
which had come into the hands of Sir Charles Blagden,
from the Duke of
Leeds: and afterwards I saw the stone itself. That
it plainly had a
dark, black crust; with several concave impressions
on the outside,
which must have been made before it was quite hardened;
just like what
is related concerning the crusts of those stones that
fell in
Italy. That its substance was not properly
of a granite kind, as
described in the printed paper; but a sort of grit
stone; composed
(somewhat like the stones said to have fallen in Italy)
of sand and
ashes. That it contained very many particles,
obviously of the
appearance of gold, and silver, and iron; (or rather
more truly of
pyrites). That there were also several
small rusty specks; probably
from decomposed pyrites; and some striated
marks; that it does not
effervesce with acids; and that, as far
as I have ever seen, or known,
or have been able to obtain any information, no such
stone has ever
been found, before this time, in Yorkshire; or in
any part of England.
Nor can I easily conceive that such a species of stone
could be formed,
by art, to impose upon the public.
Whether, therefore, it might, or might not, possibly
be the effect of
ashes flung out from Heckla, and wafted to
England; like those flung
out from Vesuvius, and (as I am disposed to believe)
wafted to Tuscany,
I have nothing to affirm.
I wish to be understood to preserve mere records,
the full authority for
which, deserves to be investigated more and more.
Having, nevertheless, gone so far as to say thus much;
I ought to add,
that the memorial of such sort of large stones having
fallen from the
clouds is still preserved also in Germany.
For one is recorded to have fallen in Alsace, in the midst of a storm
of hail, November 29th, A. D. 1630; which is said
to be preserved in
the great church of Anxissem: and to be
like a large dark sort of
flint-stone; having its surface operated upon by fire:
and to be of very
many pounds weight.
And another is said to be still preserved at Vienna.
This last is described by Abbe Stutz, Assistant
in the Imperial
cabinet of curiosities at Vienna, in a book printed
in German, at
Leipsyc, in 1790: entitled Bergbaukimde
(or the Science of
Mining.)
After describing two other stones, said to have fallen
from the clouds:
one in the Eichstedt country in Germany; and
another in the Bechin
circle, in Bohemia, in July, 1753; concerning the
real falling of
which he had expressed some doubts; he proceeds to
describe the falling
of two, (whereof this was one,) not far from Agram,
the capital of
Croatia, in Hungary; which caused him to change
his opinion; and to
believe, that the falling of such stones from heaven,
was very possible.
His words, fairly translated, in the beginning
of his narrative,
are, “These accounts put me in mind of a mass
of iron, weighing
seventy-one pounds, which was sent to the imperial
collection of natural
curiosities: about the origin of which many
mouths have been distorted
with scoffing laughter. If, in the Eichstedt
specimen, the effects of
fire appear tolerably evident; they are, in
this, not to be
mistaken. Its surface is full of spherical
impressions, like the mass
of iron, which the celebrated Pallas found
on the Jenisei river;
except that here the impressions are larger, and less
deep; and it
wants both the yellow glass, which fills up the hollows
of the
Siberian iron; and the sand stone, which
is found in the Eichstedt
specimen; the whole mass being solid, compact, and
black, like hammered
iron.”
And his words in the end of the narrative are,
“There is a great step from the disbelief of
tales, to the finding out
the true cause of a phaenomenon which appears wonderful
to us. And
probably I should have committed the fault into which
we so naturally
fall, respecting things we cannot explain; and have
rather denied the
whole history, than have determined to believe any
thing so
incredible; if various new writings, on electricity,
and thunder, had
not fortunately, at that time come into my hands;
concerning remarkable
experiments of reviving metallic calces by
the electric spark.
Lightning is an electrical stroke on a large scale. If
then the
reduction of iron can be obtained, by the discharge
of an electrical
machine; why should not this be accomplished as well,
and with much
greater effect by the very powerful discharge of the
lightning of the
clouds?”
The substance of the account of the fall of stones,
in Hungary, as given
by him, after the most accurate inquiries, is what
I shall now add in
the following abridged detail; and it was verified
by Wolfgang
Kukulyewich, Spiritual vicar of Francis Baron Clobuschiczky,
Bishop of
Agram, who caused seven eye witnesses to be examined,
concerning the
actual falling of these stones on the 26th of May,
1751; which
witnesses were ready to testify all they affirmed,
upon oath, and one
of them was Mr. George Marsich, Curate, as we should
call him, of the
parish.
According to their accounts; about six o’clock,
in the afternoon of the
day just mentioned, there was seen towards the east,
a kind of fiery
ball; which, after it had burst into two parts, with
a great report,
exceeding that of a cannon, fell from the sky, in
the form, and
appearance of two chains entangled in one another: and
also with a
loud noise, as of a great number of carriages rolled
along. And after
this a black smoke appeared; and a part of the ball
seemed to fall in an
arable field of one Michael Koturnass; on the
fall of which to the
ground a still greater noise was heard; and a shock
perceived, something
like an earthquake.
This piece was afterwards soon dug out of the ground;
which had been
particularly noted to be plain and level, and ploughed
just before; but
where it was now found to have made a great fissure,
or cleft, an ell
wide, whilst it singed the earth on the sides.
The other piece, which fell in a meadow, was also
dug up; and weighed
sixteen pounds.
And it is fairly observed, that the unadorned manner
in which the whole
account from Agram is written; the agreement
of the different
witnesses, who had no reason to accord in a lie; and
the similarity of
this history to that of the Eichstedt stone;
makes it at least very
probable, that there was indeed something real, and
worth notice, in the
account.
The Eichstedt stone (somewhat like that said
to have fallen so lately
in Yorkshire) is described as having been composed
of ash-grey sand
stone, with fine grains intermixed all through it,
partly of real native
iron, and partly of yellowish brown ochre of iron:
and as being about as
hard as building stone. It is said not
to effervesce with acids, and
evidently to consist of small particles of siliceous
stone and iron. It
had also a solid malleable coat of native iron, as
was supposed, quite
free from sulphur, and about two lines thick; which
quite covered its
surface; resembling a blackish glazing. And the
whole mass exhibited
evident marks of having been exposed to fire.
A plain testimony of the falling of this was affirmed
to be, produced as
follows; that a labourer, at a brick-kiln, in winter, when the earth was covered
with snow, saw it fall down out of the air immediately after a violent clap of
thunder; and that he instantly ran up to take it out of the snow; but found he
could not do so, on account of its heat; and was obliged therefore to wait, to
let it cool. That it was about half a foot in diameter; and was entirely covered
with a black coat like iron.
And I must now add that there is a record; that
stones, to the
number of some hundreds, did once fall in the neighbourhood
of a place
called Abdua; which were very large and heavy; of
the colour of rusty
iron; smooth, and hard; and
of a sulphureous smell: and which were
observed to fall from a vehement whirlwind; that appeared
(like that in
Tuscany) as an atmosphere of fire.
Here I intended to have concluded all my observations.
But a recent
publication, which I knew not of, when these sheets
were written,
obliges me to add a few more pages.
In a very singular tract, published in 1794, at Riga,
by Dr. Chladni,
concerning the supposed origin of the mass of iron
found by Dr. Pallas
in Siberia; which the Tartars still affirm to be an
holy thing, and,
to have fallen from heaven; and concerning
what have been supposed, by
him, to be similar phaenomena; some circumstances
are also mentioned,
which it would be an unjust omission not to take notice
of shortly, on
the present occasion.
With the author’s hypothesis I do not presume
to interfere; but surely
his facts, which he affirms in support of his ideas,
deserve much
attention; and ought to be inserted, before I conclude
these
observations: and the rather, as they were adduced
to maintain
conclusions very different from these now offered
to the consideration
of the curious.
On the 21st of May, 1676, a fire ball was seen to come from Dalmatia, proceeding over the Adriatic sea; it
passed obliquely over
Italy; where an hissing noise was heard; it burst
SSW from Leghorn, with
a terrible report; and the pieces are said to have
fallen into the
sea, with the same sort of noise, as when red
hot iron is quenched or
extinguished in water. Its height was computed
to be not less than
thirty-eight Italian miles; and it is said to have
moved with immense
velocity. Its form was oblong, at least as the
luminous appearance
seemed in its passage.
Avicenna mentions, (Averrhoes, lido Meteor.) that he had
seen at Cordova, in Spain, a sulphureous stone that
had fallen from
heaven.
In Spangenberg’s Chron. Saxon, an
account is found, that at Magdeburg,
in A. D. 998, two great stones, fell down in a storm
of thunder: one in
the town itself; the other near the Elbe, in the open
country.
The well known, and celebrated Cardan, in his
book, De Varietate
Rerum. tells us, that he himself,
in the year 1510,
had seen one hundred and twenty stones fall from heaven;
among which
one weighed one hundred and twenty; and another sixty
pounds. That they
were mostly of an iron colour, and very hard,
and smelt of brimstone.
He remarks, moreover, that about three o’clock,
a great fire was to be
seen in the heavens; and that about five o’clock
the stones fell down
with a rushing noise.
And Julius Scaliger (in his book De Subtilitate
Exerc.)
affirms, that he had in his possession a piece of
iron (as he calls it,)
which had fallen from heaven in Savoy.
Wolf (in Lection. Memorab.) mentions a great
triangular stone, described by Sebastian Brandt,
(which seems to have
been the identical stone I have already mentioned
as having been
preserved in the church of Anxissem,) and which was
said to have fallen
from heaven, in the year 1493, at Ensisheim or Ensheim.
Muschenbroek, speaking of the same stone,
says, that the stone was
blackish, weighed about 300lb. and that marks of fire
were to be seen
upon it; but apprehended (in which he seems to have
been mistaken) that
the date of the fall was 1630.
Chladni also mentions another instance (from
Nic. Huknanfii Hist.
Hungar) of five stones, said to
have fallen from
heaven at Miscoz, in Transylvania, in a terrible
thunder storm and
commotion of the air, which were as big as a man’s
head, very heavy, of
a pale yellow, and iron, or rusty colour; and of a
strong sulphureous
smell; and that four of them were kept in the treasury
room at Vienna.
He adds, (from John Binbard’s Thuring.) that on the
26th of July, 1581, between one and two o’clock
in the afternoon, a
stone fell down in Thuringia, with a clap of
thunder, which made the
earth shake; at which time a small light cloud was
to be seen, the sky
being otherwise clear. It weighed 39lb.; was
of a blue and brownish
colour. It gave sparks, when struck with a flint,
as steel does. It had
sunk five quarters of an ell deep in the ground; so
that the soil, at
the time, was struck up to twice a man’s height;
and the stone itself
was so hot, that no one could bear to touch it.
It is said to have been
afterwards carried to Dresden.
He adds, also, that in the 31st Essay of the Breslau
Collections,
is found an account by Dr. Rost; that on the
22d of June, 1723, about
two o’clock in the afternoon, in the country
of Pleskowicz, some miles
from Reichstadt, in Bohemia, a small cloud
was seen, the sky being
otherwise clear; whereupon, at one place twenty-five,
at another eight,
great and small stones fell down, with a loud report,
and without any
lightning being perceived. The stones appeared
externally black,
internally like a metallic ore, and smelt strongly
of brimstone.
And I shall conclude all Chladni’s remarkable
facts, in addition to
those which I had myself collected, before ever I
heard of his curious
book, with a short summary of what he calls one of
the newest accounts
of this kind, extracted from the Histoire de l’Academie
des Sciences,
1769.
It is an account of three masses, which fell down
with thunder, in
provinces very distant from one another; and which
were sent to the
Academy in 1769. They were sent from Maine,
Artois, and Cotentin:
and it is affirmed, that when they fell an hissing
was heard; and that
they were found hot. All three were like one
another; all three were of
the same colour, and nearly of the same grain; and
small metallic and
pyritical particles could be distinguished in them;
and, externally,
all three were covered with an hard ferruginous coat:
and, on chemical
investigation, they were found to contain iron, and
sulphur.
Considering, then, all these facts so positively affirmed,
concerning
these various, most curious phaenomena: the explosions; the sparks; the lights;
the hissing noises; the stones seen to fall; the stones dug up hot, and even
smoking; and some scorching, and even burning other bodies in their passage; we
cannot but also bring to remembrance, what Sir John Pringle affirmed to have
been observed; concerning a fiery meteor, seen on Sunday, the 26th of November,
1758, in several parts of England and Scotland.
That the head, which appeared about half the diameter of the moon, was of a
bright white, like iron when almost in a melting heat; the
tail, which appeared about 8 deg. in length, was of
a duskish red, burst
in the atmosphere, when the head was about 7 deg.
above the horizon, and
disappeared; and in the room thereof were seen three
bodies like stars,
within the compass of a little more than three degrees
from the head,
which also kept descending with the head.
That before this, in another place, near Ancram in
Scotland, (where the
same meteor was seen) one-third of the tail, towards
the extremity,
appeared to break off, and to separate into
sparks, resembling
stars. That soon after this the body of
the meteor had its light
extinguished, with an explosion; but, as it seemed
to the observer
there, the form of the entire figure of the body,
quite black, was
seen to go still forwards in the air. By some persons, also, an hissing
noise was apprehended to be heard.
Whether this might, or might not be an ignited body,
of the kind we have
been describing, falling to the earth, deserves consideration.
Sir John
Pringle seems to have been convinced that it was really
a solid
substance; but fairly adds, that if such meteors
had really ever
fallen to the earth, there must have been, long ago,
so strong evidence
of the fact, as to leave no room to doubt.
Perhaps, in the preceding accounts, we have such evidence,
now fairly
collected together; at least in a certain degree.
I take all the facts, just as I find them affirmed.
I have preserved a
faithful and an honest record.
For the sake of possible philosophical use; let
the philosophical, and
curious just preserve these facts in remembrance.
For the sake of philological advantage; let
the discerning weigh, and
judge. For (if such things be,) what has so often
come to pass,
according to what is commonly called the usual
course of nature; may
most undoubtedly, henceforth, without any hesitating
doubts, be believed
to have been brought to pass, on an extraordinary
occasion, in a still
more tremendous manner, by the immediate fiat of
the Almighty.
Let no man scoff; lest he drives away the means of
real
information. And let all men watch,
for the increase of science.
The wisdom and power of God are far above not only the first apprehensions,
but even the highest ideas of man. And our truest wisdom, and best improvement
of knowledge, consist in searching out, and in attending diligently, to what he
has actually done: ever bearing in mind those words of the holy Psalmist.
“The works of The Lord are great: sought
out of all them that have
pleasure therein.
“The Lord hath so done his marvellous works,
that they ought to be
had in remembrance.”
POSTSCRIPT
Since these sheets were printed, I
have received from Sir Charles Blagden, a present
of one of the very small stones mentioned, that
are affirmed to have fallen in Tuscany; and which has
very lately been brought carefully from Italy.
Its figure plainly indicates, that
in the instant of its formation, there was a strong
effort towards crystallization. For it is an
irregular quadrilateral pyramid; whose base,
an imperfect kind of square, has two of its adjoining
sides about six-tenths of an inch long, each; and
the other two, each about five-tenths: whilst
two of the triangular sides of the pyramid, are about
six-tenths, on every side of each triangle, all of
which are a little curved: and the other two
triangular sides, are only five-tenths on the sides
where these two last join.
Its black crust, or coating, is such
as has been described in the preceding pages:
and is also remarkable, for the appearance of a sort
of minute chequer work, formed by very fine white
lines on the black surface.