Meteors fell to northern Norway
At 2 am 7-6 (local time), a large meteorite flies in the skies of Troms and Finnmark, northern Norway and falls with a strong impact on the bomb.
Farmer Peter Bruvold - prepared a camera to take a picture of his donkey child giving birth - was lucky enough to "catch" the meteor in the middle of the morning - Photo: Aftenposten
At 2 am 7-6 (local time), a large meteorite flies in the skies of Troms and Finnmark, northern Norway and falls with a strong impact on the bomb falling on Hiroshima, Japan.
Daily newspaper Aftenposten said meteorites appeared as a fireball, clearly visible on the hundreds of kilometers in the bright summer sky over the Arctic Circle.
Later, meteorites fell on an uninhabited mountain slope at Reisadalen, north of Troms. Karasjok Earth Physics Station (Norway) measured the impact of meteorite on the ground. Many houses were shaken and curtains were blown into the neighborhoods of the neighborhoods.
Knut Jorgen Roed Odegaard - Norway's leading astronomer - said he hoped to prove that this Norwegian falling meteorite was the largest, weighing about 1,000kg, breaking the previous record of the Alta meteorite weighing 90kg in the year. 1904.
He said that comparing this meteorite to the atomic bomb in Hiroshima was compared to the explosion but the radioactive meteorite.
UA
- The thousand-dollar meteorite broke through the roof of a Thai family
- Video: Fire bridge makes Finland night sky bright as day
- Meteorites fall and create a giant double hole in Sweden
- Rain worms in Norway
- The meteorite that cleans humanity is just a matter of time.
- Meteors explode into night in Siberia
- Rare footage: A piece of meteorite hits the ground, illuminating a sky
- Indian farmers are shocked when meteors fall between rice fields
- 9 ways to block meteorites
- As long as meteors fall more than 30 seconds, dinosaurs are not extinct
Scientists discover a photon traveling back in time Is the moon also affected by the Covid-19 epidemic? NASA shuts down plasma device to save spacecraft 20.5 billion kilometers away Surprised to know the identity of the Russian missile debris 'hunter' A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Discovery suggests: Earth may escape after Sun turns into red giant ESA launches Hera spacecraft to study how to protect Earth