Adam Hogg Posted February 15, 2013 Report Posted February 15, 2013 Let's hope it doesn't get deflected or knock out our satellites or land on Table 25.http://www.independe...on-8496325.htmlThis really applies i think:
Brett Posted February 16, 2013 Report Posted February 16, 2013 http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=R8QjaAPrxvQ
keith lockey Posted February 16, 2013 Author Report Posted February 16, 2013 How come no one saw the Russian meteorite coming - ie scientists and astronomers!! It just shows you we have no effective deterent or warning system against possible extinction level events from space rocks. That ruddy thing was on top of us and not one organization warned the populace. What if that had been the size of Manhattan or the Isle of White! Russia could have had another Tunguska. And people laugh at things like the Mayan Prophecy. To be honest folks, I think we just dodged a bullet. And there are thousands of others out there.
Malcolm Robinson Posted February 16, 2013 Report Posted February 16, 2013 Thinking along the same lines Keef2 although the news report I saw said it had been tracked for up to a year.
threegee Posted February 16, 2013 Report Posted February 16, 2013 It's a law of nature - you never see the BIG event coming! Humans prattle on about largely inconsequential things (so called global warming; holes in ozone layer; horse meat; etc), but nature smiles and does its own thing.A lesson to the anti-nuclear/anti-progress lobby. They make a song and dance about inconsequential levels of radiation, yet nature bombards us with it constantly, and sets off the equivalent of a nuke over our heads without any warning. One day it will be more than an odd few tons of rock and poof - we'll all go the way of the dinosaurs! So they'd better start their protest campaign agin nature right now. Though they would do well to note that the only way we will ever have a tiny chance of escaping is if we intelligently pursue a nuclear future. 1
keith lockey Posted February 16, 2013 Author Report Posted February 16, 2013 Thinking along the same lines Keef2 although the news report I saw said it had been tracked for up to a year.Was that not the near-miss asteroid, Malcolm? I know they were tracking that, but the Russian meteorite took everyone by surprise. I read somewhere that it was too small to track - or to be seen approaching. I've just finished reading a book called THE MARS MYSTERY by Graham Hancock and it dealt with comets, meteorites and asteroids. It is quite frightening to realise how vulnerable our blue world is to space rocks.
Malcolm Robinson Posted February 16, 2013 Report Posted February 16, 2013 Read one or two of Hancock's myself Keef. You may be correct and it was the near earth one?
Keith Scantlebury Posted February 17, 2013 Report Posted February 17, 2013 Was that not the near-miss asteroid, Malcolm? I know they were tracking that, but the Russian meteorite took everyone by surprise. I read somewhere that it was too small to track - or to be seen approaching. I've just finished reading a book called THE MARS MYSTERY by Graham Hancock and it dealt with comets, meteorites and asteroids. It is quite frightening to realise how vulnerable our blue world is to space rocks.Space rocks, TELSTAR ,Tornadoes --- VENUS in blue jeans , Jimmy Clanton ----- ROCKET man , Elton John ---- MOON river , er thingumy ------ Under the MOON of love , Showaddywaddy -- as well as all of Bowies efforts
Adam Hogg Posted February 17, 2013 Report Posted February 17, 2013 Space rocks, TELSTAR ,Tornadoes --- VENUS in blue jeans , Jimmy Clanton ----- ROCKET man , Elton John ---- MOON river , er thingumy ------ Under the MOON of love , Showaddywaddy -- as well as all of Bowies effortsMoon River was Andy Williams Keith.
keith lockey Posted February 17, 2013 Author Report Posted February 17, 2013 (edited) Moon River was Andy Williams Keith.Actually, Adam, it was Danny Williams who had a number 1 with it in 1961. (I fell for that one in a quiz as well.) Edited February 17, 2013 by keith lockey
Malcolm Robinson Posted February 17, 2013 Report Posted February 17, 2013 Is that Keef1 getting carried away coz he won one of Keef2's quiz's?
Keith Scantlebury Posted February 17, 2013 Report Posted February 17, 2013 Is that Keef1 getting carried away coz he won one of Keef2's quiz's? Yaaassum
mickypotts Posted February 18, 2013 Report Posted February 18, 2013 Back in 1986 I was working construction at the Philadelphia North East airport we were adding a building at the base of the control tower to train air traffic controllers, we had to dig over 30 Feet down through clay to reach bedrock and pour the concrete footings, I was in the trench nearest the tower when I saw a dark streak in the clay from the surface, at about 25 feet a hard chunk was sticking out so I got closer and pried it loose with my claw hammer, it was very heavy and mettalic, oval shape and about the size of a pancake, about 2 inches thick and kind of curved inward. a sledge hammer could not put a dent in it. it had a bubbly kind of surface.I cleaned it up and took it home where it sat on my porch for years as a doorstop until my son Jonathan needed something for his Science fair at school so he took the rock.It sits in the science class to this day in a glass case, and they Identified it at Penn state university as a Meteorite, They think I donated it to the school which I suppose I did but they valued it at over $10,000.00 !!!!!Moral...........Easy Come Easy Go
keith lockey Posted February 18, 2013 Author Report Posted February 18, 2013 Back in 1986 I was working construction at the Philadelphia North East airport we were adding a building at the base of the control tower to train air traffic controllers, we had to dig over 30 Feet down through clay to reach bedrock and pour the concrete footings, I was in the trench nearest the tower when I saw a dark streak in the clay from the surface, at about 25 feet a hard chunk was sticking out so I got closer and pried it loose with my claw hammer, it was very heavy and mettalic, oval shape and about the size of a pancake, about 2 inches thick and kind of curved inward. a sledge hammer could not put a dent in it. it had a bubbly kind of surface.I cleaned it up and took it home where it sat on my porch for years as a doorstop until my son Jonathan needed something for his Science fair at school so he took the rock.It sits in the science class to this day in a glass case, and they Identified it at Penn state university as a Meteorite, They think I donated it to the school which I suppose I did but they valued it at over $10,000.00 !!!!!Moral...........Easy Come Easy GoThat's truly amazing, Mickeypotts,! I wish I had your resolve, because I think I would have gone on a bender for the rest of my life. Great story.
keith lockey Posted May 18, 2013 Author Report Posted May 18, 2013 NOT ANOTHER ONE!!!http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/asteroid-nine-times-the-size-of-the-qe2-liner-to-sail-pass-earth-8621999.html
Adam Hogg Posted May 18, 2013 Report Posted May 18, 2013 NOT ANOTHER ONE!!!http://www.independe...th-8621999.htmlWheres Bruce Willis and his team when you need them.
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