Categories: News

The tragic story of this famous meteorite

And the boy who fought the museum that took everything from him.

In 1897, American explorer Robert Peary returned from his latest Arctic expedition to Greenland with an enormous iron meteorite, which he had taken from a small tribe of Greenlandic Inuit, the Inughuit. Also on board his ship were six Inughuit. Peary had convinced them to come with him to New York to be studied by the American Museum of Natural History in exchange for guns and tools. But soon after returning to New York, Peary left on a promotional speaking tour. The six Inughuit never saw him again.

Within a few months of exposure to the warmer climate and new germs, four of the Inughuit — Qisuk, Nuktaq, Atangana, and Aviaq — had died of respiratory disease. And another, Uisaakassak, asked to return to Greenland on one of Peary’s ships. The only Inuk left was 9-year-old Minik, Qisuk’s son. The museum officials told Minik they buried his father’s body, but that was a lie. They had actually stored Qisuk’s remains inside the museum to study.

Minik grew up in New York and went by the name Mene Wallace. In 1907, he learned the truth about his father and publicly pleaded with the museum to return Qisuk’s remains to him so he could give him a proper burial, but the museum refused. Minik eventually returned to Greenland on one of Peary’s ships in 1909 and needed to relearn Inughuit customs and his native language, Inuktun.

The American Museum of Natural History kept the remains of the four Inughuit who died in its care until 1993. Today, there is no mention inside the museum of Minik or the other five Inughuit brought to New York in 1897. The giant meteorite Peary took, however, remains a signature exhibit.

You can find the video above and the entire library of Vox’s videos on YouTube.

Vox - Huntsville Tribune

Recent Posts

California’s governor has vetoed a historic AI safety bill

California Gov.Gavin Newsom speaks during a press conference with the California Highway Patrol announcing new…

8 hours ago

America keeps choosing poverty — but it doesn’t have to

Welcome to the first issue of Within Our Means, a biweekly newsletter about ending poverty…

17 hours ago

The climate crisis is here. We can still have a better world.

If I asked you to tell me the one issue that makes you feel the…

19 hours ago

MTV’s nostalgia problem, explained by The Challenge

The cast of MTV’s The Challenge: Battle of The Eras. You’d be forgiven for thinking…

2 days ago

Don’t use Venmo as your checking account

Venmo is good for sending money to friends, but it’s not necessarily the safest place…

2 days ago

Weather radar showed a strange blue mass in the eye of Hurricane Helene. What was it?

Dark clouds from then-tropical storm Helene over Havana, Cuba, on September 25. | Yamil Lage/AFP…

2 days ago