Coding With Fun
Home Docker Django Node.js Articles Python pip guide FAQ Policy

Is the tunguska meteor really a meteor?


Asked by Omari Edwards on Dec 07, 2021 Meteor



Although that is the generally accepted theory, there is no solid inescapable truth to the claims. Several researchers over the decades have quietly suggested that the explosion over Tunguska was not a meteor, but of something more “nuts-and-bolts”.
In fact,
The Tunguska event is the largest impact event on Earth in recorded history. Studies have yielded different estimates of the meteoroid's size, on the order of 50 to 190 metres (160 to 620 feet), depending on whether the body entered with a low or high speed.
Accordingly, Italian scientists from the University Of Bologna now claim they have uncovered evidence of the Tunguska meteorite in Lake Cheko, a location long thought to have been an “impact crater” where at least one fragment of the obliterated meteoroid made it to solid ground (theoretically forming the lake).
Also,
As exciting as these possibilities sound, the most likely cause of the Tunguska Event was probably something a little more ordinary. Was The Tunguska Event Caused By A Meteorite?
Also Know,
On the morning of June 30, 1908, the largest asteroid impact in recorded history occurred in a remote part of Siberia, Russia. The explosion happened over the sparsely populated Eastern Siberian taiga, above Siberia’s Podkamennaya Tunguska River in what is now Krasnoyarsk Krai.