Press releases | 07/22/2024 Reaching for the stars – LTM 1060/2 from GRÚAS BOVIER SRL hoists meteorites in Argentina

  • Unusual crane job for Argentinian customer GRÚAS BOVIER SRL
  • LTM 1060/2 hoists two meteorites out of a natural history museum
  • Exciting job which was preceded by a criminal case

The range of hoisting jobs which crane service providers are asked to do by their customers is quite diverse. Argentinian company GRÚAS BOVIER SRL completed a very special crane job in the province of Entre Rios – to the north of Buenos Aires, two meteorites had to be lifted out of a museum and prepared for transport.

Argentinian crane contractor GRÚAS BOVIER SRL used an LTM 1060/2 to hoist two meteorites out of a museum in Paraná.

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A lorry waits in front of the “Profesor Antonio Serrano” Museum for the LTM 1060/2 to place the two meteorites on its load bed.

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After the space rocks had been moved out of the building into the inner courtyard, the LTM 1060/2 lifted them over the roofs of the museum.

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After the space rocks had been moved out of the building into the inner courtyard, the LTM 1060/2 lifted them over the roofs of the museum.

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A heavenly load on the hook – the meteorites weighed in at 600 and 1,600 kilograms.

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In action at an extraordinary hub: Justo Bovier, Tadeo Bovier Snr. and Tadeo Bovier Jnr. (from left to right).

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“To be honest, it would never have occurred to us that we would one day be asked to hoist two rocks from outer space,” says Justo Bovier from GRÚAS BOVIER SRL, who still cannot quite believe it. In June, he and his team were working in Paraná with an LTM 1060/2 built in 2006. The job involved hoisting two meteorite fragments from the Antonio Serrano Natural History Museum. “After we had completed the job with our crane, they were taken to the place where they were originally discovered in the northern Argentinian province of Chaco, 1,000 kilometres from our city.”

The two space rocks weighed over two tonnes in total - with one weighing 1,600 kilograms and the other 600 kilograms. To hoist them, the 4-axle crane was set up with twelve tonnes of ballast and the crane boom was extended to a length of 29 metres. A routine hoist in itself, but one that required extensive planning in advance. As the cultural and historical heritage of the province of Entre Rios, the museum is a listed building. The building, including the floors and inner courtyard, could not be modified for hoisting the meteorites: “So our LTM 1060/2 hoisted the fragments from the inner courtyard over the roofs without them having to pass through the various rooms of the museum,” adds Bovier. The work, including safety measures and road closures, took more than two hours.

Exciting job, exciting back story

GRÚAS BOVIER has been specially commissioned by the Chaco provincial government authorities. And the back story of the meteorites is no less exciting than the actual job for GRÚAS BOVIER. Around 4,000 years ago, rocks weighing several tonnes fell to earth and landed in “Campo del Cielo”, in the area of the province of Chaco, whose poetic name translates as Field of the Sky, they caught the attention of scientists and many tourists. And they also attracted the interest of smugglers. They stole the two meteorites to sell them on the black market. The smugglers travelled around 1.100 kilometres with the rocks, but they never made it out of the country. On 23 February 2007, the meteorites were discovered during a traffic control by the Gendarmería Nacional Argentina in the Ceibas area of the province Entre Ríos, who then placed them in the care of the Museo de Ciencias Naturales y Antropológicas “Profesor Antonio Serrano” in Paraná, the provincial capital of Entre Ríos. So, all’s well that ends well, with the two space rocks finally being returned to the place where they were originally found.

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Nota de prensa Español PDF (347 KB)
Presseinformation Deutsch DOCX (245 KB)
Presseinformation Deutsch PDF (370 KB)
Press release English DOCX (244 KB)
Press release English PDF (383 KB)

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Berenike Nordmann

Marketing and Communication


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