It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Originally posted by Ezekial
Almost 100 years ago, a powerful NUCLEAR EXPLOSION happened in the Siberian wastelands of Russia!
Originally posted by Off_The_Street
Just about every scientist I can think of -- Russian or any other nationality -- now believes that the Tunguska blast was caused by a stony meteorite exploding at a few kilometers' altitude back in 1908.
Just about every scientist I can think of -- Russian or any other nationality -- now believes that the Tunguska blast was caused by a stony meteorite exploding at a few kilometers' altitude back in 1908
Originally posted by Gazrok
Just about every scientist I can think of -- Russian or any other nationality -- now believes that the Tunguska blast was caused by a stony meteorite exploding at a few kilometers' altitude back in 1908
Not to mention, most respected UFOlogists even. Just yesterday, I was re-reading the UFO Casebook by Kevin Randle (decent book btw), and in it, he interviews Dr. Van Allen (as in Van Allen belts) about Tunguska. Van Allen states basically the same as above (but goes into far greater detail as in why), that this was a meteorite (or more likely cometary fragments) exploding in the air before impact.
Satan had some "redbeans and rice" in New Orleans. It was just a FART!
But the current theory accepted by most astronomers and geologists is that it was in fact a meteor which caused Tunguska. What they believe is that the meteorite exploded while still in the air over Tunguska. The devastation on the surface was caused by the resulting detonation wave in the air. And there is a "smoking gun" of evidence for either a comet or meteor impact. Core samples were taken of the soil around the site, and high concentrations of iridium were found. Iridium is a rare element on Earth, but common in meteorites, asteroids and comets. There is no evidence for the "death ray."