[meteorite-list] Giant Blast in New Zealand Believed To Be Meteor
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue Jun 15 12:49:08 2004 Message-ID: <200406151648.JAA19351_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> Note: the date on this meteor appears to be the day before the meteorite fall on the house in New Zealand. Ron Baalke ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Giant blast believed to be meteor By BERNARD CARPINTER www.stuff.co.nz June 11, 2004 A meteor entering Earth's atmosphere is the most likely explanation for a huge bang and flash of light that woke people all over Wairoa. People reported what sounded like an explosion at 3.40am yesterday from Kotemaori, south of Wairoa, to Mahia Peninsula in the north and Lake Waikaremoana inland. Sergeant Chris Flood said he slept through the bang but many people had been woken by it. "The reports have come in from places probably 75 kilometres apart. "It must have been one hell of an explosion." Those who had been awake said they had seen light filling the sky, much brighter than lightning. "It lit up everything, they said," Mr Flood said. There had been no reports of damage. A meteor seemed the most probable cause. A Mahia resident said she had been woken by a big thud, followed by two or three smaller ones. "I thought someone had hit our shed so I went and had a look but there was nothing there," she said. The senior astronomer at the Carter Observatory in Wellington, Brian Carter, said he had received no reports of a meteor in the region. June had been predicted to be a quiet month for meteor showers in New Zealand, but it was still possible for a single meteor to come in. "It must have been something quite impressive," Mr Carter said. The meteor could have exploded in the atmosphere, in which case none of it - or only very small parts of it - would have hit the ground. Observatory astronomer Kay Leather said a meteor, which may be no larger than fist size, would cause a loud explosion and a light as bright as daylight. The duty seismologist at the Institute of Geological and Nuclear Sciences, Peter McGinty, said the institute had a station at Nuhaka, north of Wairoa, but it had recorded no tremors at that time. That indicated that the meteor - assuming it was a meteor - must have burnt up in the atmosphere. Received on Tue 15 Jun 2004 12:48:53 PM PDT |
StumbleUpon del.icio.us Yahoo MyWeb |