Sources

Sources/Works Cited for
Phenomenal Disaster: America’s Deadliest Forest Fire

(All external links open in new tab.)
1. Wisconsin Legislature. Journal of Proceedings of the 26th Annual Session for the Year 1873. 1873
2. Tilton, Frank. The Great Fires in Wisconsin. Reprinted in the Green Bay Historical Bulletin (1931) 7: 1-99. 1871
3. Holand, R. Hjalmar, M. A. The Great Fire of 1871, Door County, Wisconsin, History of Door County, Wisconsin The County Beautiful. Chicago: The S. J. Clark Publishing Company, 1917.
4. Moran, J. M. Somerville, E. L. Tornadoes of Fire at Williamsonville, Wisconsin, October 8, 1871. 1990.
5. Rita (FireStories32) Survivor Stories of the Peshtigo Fire. Oconto County WIGenWeb Project, (research only – http://archive.is/l56X)
www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wioconto/FireStories32.htm (Accessed 2016)
6. Goodspeed, Edgar Johnson. History of the Great Fires in Chicago and the West …: With a History of … Chicago: H. S. Goodspeed & Company, 1871.
7. Jensen, Joan M. Calling this Place Home. Wisconsin – 518 pages. Minnesota Historical Society, 2006.
8. Colbert, Elias; Chamberlin, Everett. Chicago and the Great Conflagration . Cincinnati and New York: C.F. Vent, 1872. Northern Illinois University
9. Sheahan, James W.,Upton, George P. The Great Conflagration. Union Publishing Co., 1872.
10. Rita (FireStories10) Survivor Stories of the Peshtigo Fire. Oconto County WIGenWeb Project, (research only – http://archive.is/l56X)
www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~wioconto/FireStories10.htm (Accessed 2016)
11. Eagle Extra, Marinette-Peshtigo, [1]October 14,1871; [2]October 14,1871
12. Pernin Rev Peter. The Great Peshtigo Fire: An Eyewitness Account. Wisconsin Magazine of History, 1971
http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/WIReader/WER2002-0.html
13. Brown, H “The Air Was Fire”: Fire Behavior At Peshtigo In 1871. Fire Management Today, U.S. Forest
Service, 2004. http://www.fs.fed.us/fire/fmt/fmt_pdfs/FMT64-4.pdf
14. Van den Dool, Huug, Weather and the Fires of 1871. NOAA/ National Weather Service, Climate Prediction Center, 2012.
15. Chyba, C. F. Thomas, P. J., Zahnle, K. J., The 1908 Tunguska explosion – Atmospheric disruption of a stony asteroid. Nature (Impact Factor: 38.6). 1993.
16. Florenskiy, K. P. Preliminary Results From The 1961 Combined Tunguska Meteorite Expedition. Meteoritica, Vol. XXIII, 1963. http://abob.libs.uga.edu/bobk/tungmet.html
17. Popova, O. G. Jenniskens, P. The Chelyabinsk Airburst Consortium. Chelyabinsk Airburst, Damage Assessment, Meteorite Recovery, and Characterization. Science 342, 2013.
18. Collins, Gareth S. Melosh, H. Jay and Marcus, Robert A. Earth Impact Effects Program: A Web- based computer program for calculating the regional environmental consequences of a meteoroid impact on Earth. Meteoritics & Planetary Science 40, 2005.
19. Tancredi, G. Ishitsuka, J. Schultz, P. Harris, R. S. Brown, P. Revelle, D. Antier, K. Le Pichon, A. Rosales, D. Vidal, E. Pavel, D. Dalmau, A. Benavente, S. Miranda, P. Pereira, G. Varela, M. E. Sánchez, L. The Carancas Crater And Meteorite Fall: The First Recorded Impact On Earth. 2008.
20. Cockell Charles S, Lee Pascal. The biology of impact craters ± a review. 2002
21. Schultz, P. H. Tunguska Simulation. (NASA’s Ames Vertical Gun Range in August of 2009) YouTube, Jun 30, 2010.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QvEL3pxm1Cc
22. Boslough, M. Tunguska Blast Simulation by Sandia Lab. 2008.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0yY34uWty_0
23. Gorkavyi, N.N. Rault, D. F. Newman, P. A. da Silva, A. M. Dudorov, A. E. New stratospheric dust belt due to the Chelyabinsk bolide. Geophysical Research Letters, 2013. VOL. 40, 4728–4733.
24. Tatum Jeremy B. Fireballs: Interpretation of airblast data. Meteoritics & Planetary Science, 1999. vol. 34, no. 4, pp. 571-585.
25. Gess, Denise. Lutz, William. Firestorm at Peshtigo: A Town, Its People, and the Deadliest Fire in American History. Henry Holt and Company, 2003.
26. Reginald, L. N. Chapter1 – Science at NASA Goddard. Solar Physics Division, MC 671
27. Bean E. F. State Geologist Increase A. Lapham, Geologist. 1963.
28. Hervig, M. E. Gordley, L. L. Deaver, L. E. Siskind, D. E. Stevens, M. H. Russell, J. M. Bailey, S. M., Megner, L. and Bardeen, C. G. First Satellite Observations of Meteoric Smoke in the Middle Atmosphere, Geophys. Res. Lett., 36, L18805. 2009.
29. Rapp, M. Plane, J. M. C. Strelnikov, B. Stobert, G. Ernst, S. Hedin, J. Fredrich, M. Hoppe, U. -P. In Situ Observations Of Meteor Smoke Particles (MSP) During the Geminids 2010: constraints on MSP size, work function and composition. Ann. Geophys., 30, 1661–1673, 2012.
30. Nittler, L. R. McCoy, T. J. Clark, P. E. Murphy, M. E. Trombka, J. I. and Jarosewich, E. Bulk element compositions of meteorites: A guide for interpreting remote-sensing geochemical measurements of
planets and asteroids, Antarct. Meteor. Res, 2004. 17, 231–251.
31. Gorkavyi, N.N. Taidakovab, T. A. Provornikovac, E. A. Gorkavyib, I. N. Akhmetvaleev, M. M. Aerosol Plume after the Chelyabinsk Bolide. Solar System Research, 2013, Vol. 47, No. 4, pp. 275–279.
32. Plane, J. M. Cosmic dust in the earth’s atmosphere. School of Chemistry, University of Leeds, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds LS2 9JT, U.K. 2012.
http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlehtml/2012/cs/c2cs35132c
33. Worther, P. Royal Society of Chemistry. Lecture, YouTube, 2013.
Iron Combustion Products. Fire and Flame [10] www.youtube.com/watch?v=xgYqazqq-1U
Magnesium Burning in Water. Fire and Flame [39] www.youtube.com/watch?v=gAhsvOP5yaM
Magnesium Reacting with Sand. Fire and Flame [40] www.youtube.com/watch?v=J60J-g4ifXg
34. Wright, C. E. Survivor Tells of the Horrors During Dreadful Fire. Peshtigo Times, Reprint October 6, 1971. 1871.
35. Urbanski, Shawn P. Hao, Wei Min and Baker, Steve. Chemical Composition of Wildland Fire Emissions. 2009
36. Martin, C. I. History of Door County, Wisconsin. State Historical Society of Wisconsin, Sturgeon Bay, WI. 1991
37. Sherrill, Marvin G. Geology and ground water in Door County, Wisconsin, with emphasis on contamination potential in the Silurian Dolomite. USGS Water Supply Paper: 2047. 1978.
38. Gundlach, H.F. Geological and Natural History Survey. U.S. Department of Agriculture, Soil Conservation Service, 1993.
39. Baird, Spencer F. Annual Record of Science and Industry for 1873. 1874.
40. Avila, A., Queralt-Mitjans, Alarcon, M. I. Mineralogical composition of African dust delivered by red rains over northeastern Spain.1997.
41. Goudie, Andrew, Middleton, Nicholas J. Desert Dust in the Global System. 2006.
42. Draper, John C. Year-book of nature and popular science for 1872. 1873.
43. Blanco, A. De Tomasi, F. Filippo, E. Manno, D. Perrone, M. R., Serra, A. Tafuro, A. M. and Tepore, A. Characterization of African dust over southern Italy. 2003.
44. Potter, J. D (1872) Astronomical Register, Volumes 10-11
45. Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, Volume 39, Part 1 October 14, 1871 – “Auroral light to the N.W. amongst clouds”. 1900.
46. Wang, L. Zhen, J. Gao, J. Zhang, Q. Chen,Y Spectroscopy of nickel monosulfide in 450−560 nm by laserinduced fluorescence and dispersed fluorescence techniques. 2010
47. Chaisson, E., McMillan, S. Astronomy Today, 3rd Ed., Prentice-Hall. 1999.
48. Tacchini, P. A Possible Catastrophe. New York Times (Aug 18, 1872)
49. Plane, J. M. Meteoric Smoke in the Earth’s Atmosphere. School of Chemistry, University of Leeds. Seminar, 2014.
www2.acd.ucar.edu/sites/default/files/seminars/Seminar_Plane.pdf
50. Haines, D.A., Kuehnast, E.L. When the Midwest burned. Weatherwise 23, 1970. 112–119.
51. Link, E. G. Elmer, S. L. Vanderveen, S. A. Soil Survey of Door County Wisconsin, 1978
52. Vondrak, T. Plane, J. M. C. Broadley, S. Janches, D. A chemical model of meteoric ablation. Atmos. Chem. Phys., 8, 2008. 7015–7031

“Bolide – a large meteor that explodes in the atmosphere.”
Google Search 2018

“Argillaceous – 1. (Geological Science) (of sedimentary rocks and deposits) composed of very fine-grained material, such as clay, shale, etc.”
The Free Dictionary By Farlex, 2017.

“Carbureted Hydrogen
archaic: any of several gaseous compounds of carbon and hydrogen (as methane).” Merriam-Webster.com. Merriam-Webster, 2017.