MessageToEagle.com – On June 30, 1908 “something” caused a huge explosion above the remote Russian forests of Tunguska, Siberia.
The blast was extremely powerful. It had the explosive force of a 15-megaton nuclear weapon, shattering windows hundreds of miles away and lighting up the skies of the Northern hemisphere for days afterwards.
With 1,000 times more power than the Hiroshima bomb, the exploding object flattened trees over an area roughly the size of Tokyo.
Since there were very few witnesses, no fragments and no impact crater, the identity of the object remains a mystery until this day. However, according to the most accepted theory an asteroid or comet exploded as it entered Earth’s atmosphere.
Today, more than 100 years later, a paper from the Russian Academy of Sciences suggests that the first physical remains of the blast have been found.
Dr. Andrei E. Zlobin, of the Russian Academy of Sciences’ Vernadsky State Geological Museum, says he has discovered the fist fragments of the object that exploded over Tunguska.
Dr. Zlobin explains that he found more than 100 stones that looked like potential meteorites at the bottom of Khushmo River’s shoal during 1988 expedition into the region of the Tunguska impact (1908).
According to Dr. Zlobin there are “visible traces of melting on the surface of all stones.”
The stones are also marked with regmaglypts – depressions and patterning on the rock’s surface caused by them being bathed in explosively hot gases.
Dr. Zlobin’s calculations indicate that the Tunguska explosion would not have generated enough heat on the ground to melt rocks already on Earth. He personally believes that these fragments were cooked inside the Tunguska fireball high above the planet.
See also:
Fukang: One Of The Greatest Extraterrestrial Gemstones Of The 21st Century
Tunguska Explosion: Mysterious And Ferocious Impact In Remote Siberia – On June 30, 1908
Ensisheim Meteorite Is The Oldest Meteorite With A Precise Date Of Impact
Unusual Green Meteorite Remains An Unsolved Cosmic Mystery
Dr. Zolbin’s research was detailed Monday (April 29) on the website arXiv.org. It has surprised many that Dr. Zlobin waited all those years before he finally revealed his discovery, but as the Physics arXiv Blog points out, the findings still need to be confirmed through a chemical analysis and a rigorous, internationally collaborative investigation.
“It’s not hard to imagine that the political changes that engulfed the Soviet Union in the year after his expedition may have played a role in this, but it still requires some explaining,” the May 2 blog post reads.
Further testing of the rocks will need to be done to confirm they came from outer-space. If Dr. Zolbin’s rocks can be confirmed as meteorites, the rocks could help scientists finally picture the object behind the historic Tunguska explosion. Dr. Zolbin says he thinks the object that caused the blast was a comet with a density similar to that of Halley’s Comet.
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