I'm not sure I'd make that leap. Certainly not after the Vatican was struck twice by lightening after Pope Benedict resigned.Let's all move to russia, the probability that a deadly meteor will strike twice in the same area is extremely small.
I'm not sure I'd make that leap. Certainly not after the Vatican was struck twice by lightening after Pope Benedict resigned.
That's what Wethersfield thought.Let's all move to russia, the probability that a deadly meteor will strike twice in the same area is extremely small.
Well it did seem to be moving pretty fast.How do we know that meteor was Russian?
2012 DA14 would level about 750 square miles if it hit. The good news for Huskies fans is that it will make it's closest pass (or hit) on the other side of the globe near Sumatra. If scientist thought it would hit, there would have been massive evacuations by now and everyone would know.
I find it interesting that space groups are saying the Russian meteor is not related to 2012 DA14. On the day an asteroid is passing within 17, 300 miles of Earth we get hit by a 20,000 pound meteor and it's just a coincidence?
Look up, everyone, and be ready.
That's the one that hit. The one that flew by was significantly larger.The meteor was a once-in-a-century event, NASA officials said, describing it as a "tiny asteroid."
The space agency revised its estimate of the meteor's size upward late Friday from 49 feet (15 meters) to 55 feet (17 meters), and its estimated mass from 7,000 to 10,000 tons.
A 150-foot asteroid hurtled through Earth's backyard Friday, coming within an incredible 17,150 miles and making the closest known flyby for a rock of its size. As asteroids go, this one is a shrimp. The one that wiped out the dinosaurs 65 million years ago was 6 miles across. But this rock could still do immense damage if it ever struck given its 143,000-ton heft, releasing the energy equivalent of 2.4 million tons of TNT and wiping out 750 square miles.
By comparison, NASA estimated that the meteor that exploded over Russia was much smaller — about 49 feet wide and 7,000 tons before it hit the atmosphere, or one-third the size of the passing asteroid.