The Peruvian people are sick with meteorites
Dozens of people in a town in Peru, near Lake Titicaca, reported vomiting and headaches after seeing a sudden formation of a hole, apparently caused by a meteorite last week.
Dozens of people in a town in Peru, near Lake Titicaca, reported vomiting and headaches after seeing a sudden formation of a hole, apparently caused by a meteorite last week.
After hearing a loud noise, the people rushed to see what happened and found a 20-meter-wide, 6.5-meter-wide crater on an uninhabited plateau in Puno area.
Experts from the Peruvian Institute of Geology are on their way to the area, about 1,200 km south of Lima, near the border with Bolivia, to determine if it is a meteorite. Analysis of soil samples from pits will show results.
"We tested about 100 people who had come close to this hole, they all vomited and had a headache because of the gas coming out of it," said Jorge Lopez, medical director in Puno.
Luisa Macedo, a geologist at the Institute of Metallurgical and Mineralogy in Lima, said the reaction between elements in meteorites and the earth's surface can produce gases and then dissolve. Meteors once fell into the Andean region in southern Peru in 2002 and 2004.
Crater in Peru. (Photo: Ukpress.google.com)
T. An
- The smart home knows that the owner is sick
- The explosion caused meteorites to pass through the sky in the United States, suspected of causing earthquakes
- Discovered a 1,000-year-old Peruvian mummy in a sitting position
- Why are people usually sick?
- The origin and name of meteorite
- The aircraft discharges waste causing Indians to think of meteorites falling
- Argentina: A family hides up to 2.5 tons of meteorites
- Why are people sick when stressed?
- Why are children and elderly people prone to getting sick?
- Huge meteorites will graze the Earth
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 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 A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye