message board
f a r s h o r e s
w o r l d w i d e   a n o m a l o u s   p h e n o m e n a   r e s o u r c e  
main menu news / articles / comments / links   e-mail :.
 HOME
 NEWS
 2002/3 ARTICLES
 WEB WARP
 SITE SEARCH






NEWS :.   

  CONTRADICTIONS OVER RUSSIAN GIANT METEORITE FALL
  Posted Aug 3.03

Original headline: 200 Tons of TNT Falls on Taiga

According to Yekaterina Shestakova, a town hall official, the expedition consists of five people, three scientists from the Moscow Meteorite Committee and two from Irkutsk. The expedition will go down the Vitim river from Bodaibo to the village of Vitimsky, from where it will proceed on foot to the place where the mysterious celestial body is presumed to have fallen.

It will be recalled that a large bolide entered the atmosphere over the villages of Vitimsky and Mama, in the Mama-Chuya district, on the night of September 24-25, 2002, at an angle of 32 degrees over the horizon and an altitude of 60 kilometers. Then there was a flash at 30 kilometers above the earth?s surface which was registered by Americans. According to the U.S. military, the explosion occurred at 58o 13.6, s.l. and 113o 27.6, e.lat.

A team from Yekaterinburg is already working in the area: Twelve scientists and undergraduates are exploring the area where the U.S. satellite registered a second point of the bolides path at an altitude of 30 kilometers, canvassing eyewitnesses and finding numerous traces of the bolide.

By the end of July yet another team of Irkutsk scientists, led by Sergei Yazev, director of the Irkutsk University Astronomic Laboratory, will arrive at the Mama-Chuya district. "All four expeditions will be working independently," Sergei Yazev said.

"We want to study different sections of the bolides flight path." The scientists are especially interested in the virtually unexplored area - from the point where the bolide was registered by the U.S. satellite (30 kilometers over the earths surface) and the place where it presumably fell to the ground. Scientists believe that this area is 30 kilometers to 50 kilometers northeast of that point.

Samples of the snow taken in the area of the meteorites fall were found to contain remnants of meteorite substance - particles of iron, nickel, and chrome that are usually present in meteorites. Furthermore, particles of enstatite, nifeline, and cristobalite were discovered. The last mentioned element is a modification of ordinary quartz that has been subjected to high temperature impact. This rarely happens on earth. In addition, cristobalite and nifeline virtually never occur together. "It seems that a fairly large bolide exploded in the atmosphere," Sergei Yazev says. "It had a 200-ton TNT equivalent. There is nothing to suggest that the body that blew up was man-made - no trace of rocket fuel or increased radiation level or elements of metal structures. Apparently it was a stone or iron-and-stone bolide. Its dimensions have yet to be established."

According to eyewitness accounts, a huge star left a shining curve in the sky, falling somewhere in the cone-shaped hills. The dazzling flash lit up the taiga for a few seconds, as though bathing it in electric light, whereupon came an explosion, so powerful that windows were shattered in houses for dozens of kilometers around. Meteorites are usually given the name of the nearest populated area. It so happens that in 1902, a Bodaibo meteorite was found in the same area. The Sikhote-Alin meteorite fell in 1947. The Chulym bolide dropped on Siberia in February 1986.

The bolide flights were accompanied by a strong induction effect, with household electric bulbs and electronic equipment burning out. Presumably, similar phenomena occurred prior to the fall of the Tunguska meteorite. The moment the Vitim body fell, Georgy Kaurtsev, a Mama airport security officer, ran out into the street: "When the sound of the explosion came, a bulb went on although the switch was in the off position. I put on a jacket and rushed out. There is a meteorological station near the building. It is fenced off with wire mounted on 12 wooden poles. I saw balls of light, 20 to 30 centimeters in diameter, shining atop every one of them. Before long, they went out, but there was no trace left on the poles in the morning."

Maybe the scientists will find the place where the meteorite fell, and study it. Scientists believe it is critical to learn more about the nature of these "space aliens" in expectation of a more serious meteorite strike.

.:Story originally published by:.
Moscow News / Russia | Timur Dugarzhapov Vremya - Aug 03.03

RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS CLAIM METEORITE WAS SPACE ICE BOULDER
  Posted July 27.03

An explosion occurred in Irkutsk Region last autumn in the early hours of 25 September 2002. An expedition organized by the Kosmopoisk International Scientific Research Association made sensational conclusions about the origin of the Vitim meteorite.

Aleksandr Beloglazov said, "The majority of some 500 witnesses of the meteorite fall were gold prospectors. At first they were absolutely sure that a nuclear war had started. The shock wave was felt over 100 sq.km. Fortunately, there were no settlements in the area - and no casualties."

Vadim Chernobrov, the head of expedition, speaking at a news conference at the Argumenty i Fakty newspaper, reported, "The blast is comparable with that of an average atomic bomb. However, it is several times less powerful than that of the Tungus meteorite explosion [June 30 1908]. The Tungus meteorite blast is known to be 2,000 time more powerful than the Hiroshima bomb".

No large meteorite fragments were found at the scene and because of this scientists believe that it was not a meteorite that collided with the Earth. In the epicentre, the expedition found ice and snow. The scientists had to search for water themselves there. And quite by chance, they tested not just the Earth, but the space ice as well.

"We found ice in the very first craters and thought it to be of terrestrial origin," said Chernobrov. "However, in a few moments we realized that it was extremely bitter."

In composition, this ice resembled water in lakes located next to nuclear power plants. Three days after the fall of the Vitim boulder, the level of radiation had practically doubled in the area. And this does not happen after meteorite falls. As of now, the radiation level is back to normal while many locals started to feel unwell immediately after the explosion.

"In 12 hours, that is the next morning, many felt aches in their joints. Three days later blood-pressure-related diseases reached their peak. Seven days later, there was a peak in kidney diseases", revealed Chernobrov.

People kept on feeling unwell for some two months. Half a year later, when the space ice started melting, kidney problems resumed, however, not for long. The scientists say that if the space ice was to be blamed for illnesses, the danger is over, as it had all melted away.

  • The above news conference report has been
          edited by FS in order to improve readability.
  • .:Story originally published by:.
    Gateway To Russia - July 27.03

    - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


    All Copyrights © are acknowledged.
    Material reproduced here is for educational and research purposes only.
    Set text size to Medium
    what's up? | e-mail | 2002/3 articles | awards