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Tunguska explosion |
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| Dec14-03, 09:40 PM | #1 |
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Tunguska explosion
Any thoughts on what this could have been?
Bassically in 1908 there was this massive explosion in the Tunguska region of Russia. the blast had approx a 20 mile radius, happened in the woods and the trees are all knocked over away from a central point. When investigated, there wasn't any impact crater nor any debris reminiscant of a meteorite, there were unusal debris found when people dug around, but unlike anything which usually accompanies a meteorite. Even stranger, where the crater should have been, there's an area of trees which weren't knocked over. Local wildalife and people began developing genetic mutations following the blast very simmilar to those developed post the nuclear bomb blasts in japan. It's estimated that the blast had approx 1,000 times the force of the bomb dropped on hiroshima. The theories I'm aware of are: -Alien ship with a nuclear reactor exploded. -Aliens nuked a forest as a kind of way to alert us that there are other beings out there. -Giant meteorite exploded approx 3 miles above ground, thus no crater. -Some sort of super seceret human weapon. None of these offer reasons for there being trees standing and alive left at the epicenter. http://www.tmeg.com/artifacts/tungus...enter_1927.gif epicenter - 1927 http://www.tmeg.com/artifacts/tunguska/forest_1927.gif |
| Dec14-03, 10:26 PM | #2 |
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I don't know, I heard a theory that it was Tesla's fault. They gave pretty convincing meathod and oppurtunity, the question is if and how, so I'm not convinced of that one.
I think the meteor one is the best, because it makes sense that if something explodes overhead, it will put pressure straight down on you. If you are a tree, you might be able to take this vertical pressure, and it is only when you are hit at enough of an angle that there is enough horizontal pressure to knock you over. |
| Dec14-03, 10:33 PM | #3 |
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Tesla was crazy, in a very awesome way, it'd be cool if that was his infamous "Tesla beam" or something like that. |
| Dec14-03, 10:47 PM | #4 |
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Tunguska explosion
You're right, I have no idea why there were trees standing up.
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| Dec15-03, 01:37 AM | #5 |
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The working explanation is that this was a comet or a soft meteor [I'm not sure of the proper language here]. If the object entering is not too hard and dense, it can vaporize before hitting the ground. This can yield results like those found in Tunguska. In the this particular event, the pattern of destruction was a dinstinctive butterfly shape. One scientists has been able to physically model this - using small scale dynamic models. A comet-like object entering at the proper trajectory produces results entirely consistent with those observed in Siberia. It was big, fast, mean[massive],the approach angle was very low, and if it had hit NY city we really would have noticed for about a 100 mile radius, but it was most likely a comet.
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| Dec15-03, 02:34 AM | #6 |
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Yes, I understood the theory, but I don't understand why the vaporization of a comet wouldn't knock down trees. Or is that not as an explosive of an event as I think? Then why were people miles away knock on their butts when the shockwave came by (why was there a shockwave?)?
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| Dec15-03, 04:03 AM | #7 |
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| Dec15-03, 04:23 AM | #8 |
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In other words, as I understand this stuff which ain't much, when it vaporizes it acts like a directed explosion - a nuclear bomb sized explosion in this case. |
| Dec15-03, 04:43 AM | #9 |
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Oh yes, his actual [high energy] tests left trees standing at the epicenter.
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| Dec15-03, 09:18 AM | #10 |
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Good explanation Ivan. Yep, the going explanation is an air burst of a small comet or asteroid. ("small" meaning like 50-75 meters or so) Impacts of this size happen every few hundred years, statistically speaking. Good thing it was an uninhabited area.
Offhand, it makes sense that it would be easier for a shockwave to knock over a tree if it hits it from the side rather than straight down. I imagine that the standing trees at the "epicenter" were stripped of their branches though. The sky is falling. [;)] |
| Dec15-03, 09:29 AM | #11 |
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The amount of energy needed to knock down a tree, which is pointing directly at the epicenter of the blast, would have to have greatly exceeded the energy released at Tunguska. It would have almost had to be enough to disintegrate the wood. Vertical structures (telephone poles, walls, etc.) under the epicenter of Hiroshima and Nagasaki blasts were also left standing. |
| Dec15-03, 05:10 PM | #12 |
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ok ivan, your explanation makes sense except for the aftereffects of genetic mutations simmilar to those of radiation poisoning.
History channel had a special on this just recently, and someone who was explaining how a meteorite could have done thins explained how the particles moving so fast could have cause some sort of radiation like effect, but I didn't really follow him at all, do you have any idea what I'm talking about? |
| Dec15-03, 05:12 PM | #13 |
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| Dec15-03, 06:36 PM | #14 |
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My bet would be: smaller.
As to wasteofo2's question, if there was an asteroid, there might have been some radioactive stuff in it. And who knows what radiation it emitted as it streaked throught the atmosphere, and then exploded. It seems to me that everything in the area would be fried, and so mutation would be the least of the problems. |
| Dec15-03, 09:32 PM | #15 |
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p.s. Just found a source (UK report on Near Earth Object Hazards) saying Tugunska was likely a 50 to 60 m object that exploded at an altitude of 8 km which flattened 2000 sq. km of forest below. Scary thing is, this kind of impact (statistically) happens about every 250 years. Tunguska was in 1908 so I guess we're ok for a while. [:D] |
| Dec16-03, 02:07 AM | #16 |
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| Dec16-03, 02:15 AM | #17 |
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