Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Russian Meteor: Scientists Say Meteor Pieces Found Near Frozen Lake

The hunt is on to find fragments of a 55-foot meteor that bust through Earth's atmosphere last week and broke up in the skies above Chelyabinsk, Russia. The meteor's fiery explosion, which released more than 30 times the

Up to 11 sensors in Greenland, Africa, Russia's Kamchatka Peninsula and other far-flung regions detected the Russian meteor blast's infrasound, or low-frequency sound waves. The sensors are part of the global network of 60 infrasound stations

A meteor flared through the skies over Russia's Chelyabinsk region early Friday, triggering an atomic bomb-sized shock wave that injured more than a thousand people, blew out windows and caused some Russians to fear

A meteor flared through the skies over Russia's Chelyabinsk region early Friday, triggering an atomic bomb-sized shock wave that injured more than a thousand people, blew out windows and caused some Russians to fear

Russian scientists believe they have recovered fragments of a meteor that exploded spectacularly near the Ural Mountains. The tiny samples were found near a frozen lake in Chebarkul, where an eight-metre crater has formed in the ice. Initial searches

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