[meteorite-list] norwegian fall

From: Bjorn Sorheim <astrogeo_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue Jun 13 14:46:41 2006
Message-ID: <6.2.1.2.2.20060613201312.044aab08_at_pop.online.no>

In this article(norwegian)
http://www.framtidinord.no/nyheter/article45150.ece
it says in the heading (translated):

** A [rock] slide no meteorite. **

(This story is also on the front page of www.framtidinord.no at the moment).

The location has been know to [many] locals since a month back.
Many has turned to the newspaper with this information in the last days.
Locals has known the slide since the snow disappeared at least one month ago.
Also a part of a local road in this Mosko vally taken by the slide is visible
to anyone going there.
So it's a very usual phenomenon in this area, which was associated
unrightfully with the exploding and rolling sounds between the vally sides.

Bj?rn S?rheim,
In Norway

-----------------------------------------------
Full norwegain text:

Utglidning, ikke meteoritt
Av AV INGE BJ?RN HANSEN

Det er ikke en meteoritt som har for?rsaket raset i fjellsiden i Moskodalen
i Reisadalen.
Beboere i omr?det bekrefter overfor Framtid i Nord at de har observert
arret i fjellsiden nesten helt siden den tiden sn?en gikk tidligere i v?r.

En av dem som bekrefter at det ikke har sl?tt noen meteoritt ned i omr?det,
i alle fall ikke siste uka, er H?kon Rosengren. Han bor p? den g?rden som
er n?rmest utrasningsstedet i det som folk i dalen kaller "Lillefjellet".

Dette fjellet ligger i utl?pet av Moskodalen. Fra g?rden han ser man rett
p? bruddet i fjellsiden. Ogs? veien raset har tatt er klart synlig.

- Kona og jeg g?r tur i omr?det nesten hver dag. Det rasomr?det som var
omtalt som nedslagsfelt for sist ukes meteoritt i Nord-Troms er i alle fall
en m?ned gammelt, sier Rosengren, og er dermed en av mange som har
bekreftet dette overfor Framtid i Nord.



At 11:03 13.06.2006, you wrote:
>That has the look of a percussion mark, to me.
>The shape is elipsoidal, the internal part is fractured, the envolving rock
>seams, by contrast, healty.
>It would be a strange rockslide.
>Even if the scale of the scar is dificult to evaluate from the photo, a mass
>of an average car falling at the final speed of a meteorite, would not let
>more evidence on a granite surface than this, I think.
>Big craters form when cosmic speed is maintained, with asteroid sized
>bodies, but why are we expecting such a big thing?
>AA
>
>
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>Meteorite-list mailing list
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Received on Tue 13 Jun 2006 02:26:16 PM PDT


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