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Restoring the Early Grazes: An International Cooperative Effort. Dave Gault, Australia and Ken Coles, U.S.A. Zane Nitzkorski’s graze project. NASA intern student reconciling current database with IOTA graze reports from 1965 to 1990
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Restoring the Early Grazes: An International Cooperative Effort Dave Gault, Australia and Ken Coles, U.S.A.
Zane Nitzkorski’s graze project • NASA intern student reconciling current database with IOTA graze reports from 1965 to 1990 • Richard Wilds sent the IOTA files he and Don Stockbauer collected • Maybe 1/3rd of the reports are not in the current database • Current database lacks observer’s names from HMNAO records used for the current database for events mainly in the 1970’s, although they are in the paper IOTA reports • Zane will not be able to finish before his internship ends August 10; he’s also working on a backlog of unreduced graze data from my expeditions during the last few years • IOTA volunteers are sought to finish the project; Ken Coles said he has students who might help with this (slide by D. Dunham, 2007)
Scanning Process Ken Coles
Examples of restored events Dave Gault
Sleuth • Using the GE map, can you identify the site that housed the 12" from 1962 to 1971? If you can, then I can obtain WGS84 coordinates via GE. - from email by Dave G.
40 years later • Regarding the question of the 12".... I don't remember the telescope specifically but I do recall making some sor[t] of observation in a dome due W of the main building. It was the only time I used a telescope at the USNO. - Ron Abileah
Mystery solved • As I remember, the 12-in. refractor was in the dome just to the east of the north-south double column of trees northwest of the main building (center of the USNO circular observatory grounds); I used it a couple of times, also, but not for a graze. In 1971, the 12-inch refractor was moved, eventually installed in the dome at the west end of the main building, where it is today. -David Dunham