Stars flutter down the house
A 337-gram piece of meteorite fell on a house in New Jersey residential area, 80km south of New York in the past week. The meteorite has a long and hard shape like metal, pierced the roof, stabbed into the wall and crept
A 337-gram piece of meteorite fell on a house in New Jersey residential area, 80km south of New York in the past week. The meteorite had a long, hard form like metal, pierced the roof, stabbed into the wall and stayed in that hole.
A group of geologists and a metal expert came to observe the meteorite piece and concluded that this was a piece of meteorite rich in iron, probably broken from an asteroid. .
While waiting for an international committee to name it, this falling sky visitor was taken by the residents of the makeshift community to name the meteor: Freehold Township.
(Photo: Reuters)
A corner of a meteorite (Photo: Reuters)
SUPPLY
- We will no longer have to fear floods when we live in a house like this
- Explain the mystery of missing stars in the universe
- The house was hidden, as it appeared in a fictional film that was in real life
- Decoding super-fast stars in 'Ngan river'
- Detects 5 oversized stars on galaxies
- Breathtaking the sight of the stars 'circus' in the sky
- Why is the star sparkling?
- Bamboo house living with natural disasters in Vietnam
- How strict is the White House protected?
- Dark Star - Gift from the Universe
SpaceX Crew-8 leaves the International Space Station to begin its journey back to Earth A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Life If You Were Born on the Moon: A Strange But Possible Prospect! US detects radio signals from 7 planets similar to Earth Two 'planets from nowhere' send confusing signals NASA captures for the first time 4 objects that travel through space 13.4 billion years, the oldest in the universe Decoding the 'heartbeat' of the cosmic monster described by Sima Qian NASA updates Voyager software from 12 billion miles away