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61 Comments
- JoaoPe, on 11/09/2007, -1/+42Now I can sleep.
- DanOnTheMoon, on 11/09/2007, -6/+38In Soviet Russia, Moon Lands on YOU!!
(yess! First russian reversal on this thread!) - fugeelama, on 11/09/2007, -2/+17Here's the lake on Google Maps:
http://maps.google.com/maps?ll=60.965,101.86&spn=0 ... - scubasteve11, on 11/09/2007, -2/+15Everyone knows the Tunguska blast was from an Interdimensional Cross-rip.
/ghostbusters - SvetlanaG, on 11/09/2007, -2/+15Great story, thank you for he find. Strange that I have not heard this news here in Russia yet, seems to be pretty important to us :(
- typicalusername, on 11/09/2007, -0/+6When they go back and dig up that rock, they'd better watch out for the Black Oil. It'll take over their minds!
- g0rdy, on 11/09/2007, -3/+8dang, i thought it was tesla's death ray :(
- teitho, on 11/09/2007, -2/+7Please. The Tunguska blast was nothing compared to the four-fold interdimensional cross-rip in New York back in '84. Tunguska didn't even have a marshmallow man!
- RogaDanar, on 11/09/2007, -1/+5We thought we were smarter than the bugs.
- cranium, on 11/09/2007, -0/+4Meteors cannot hit lakes? Really?
- edwartica, on 11/11/2007, -0/+3Considering that his comment currently has +19 diggs, and yours has -4, I believe you are in error.
- simpleid, on 11/09/2007, -0/+3aww, i was hoping it would have been telsa's fault. that would have been a lot cooler.
- Scrappy1850, on 11/08/2007, -1/+4that must have been that BEAN i had for dinner
- benjorino, on 11/09/2007, -0/+3Atomic bombs vary greatly in power. The article says 1000 Hiroshima sized bombs, but (hydrogen) bombs were made and tested up to 50 Megatons in the cold war by the russians.
- cnot3, on 11/09/2007, -0/+3THE ONLY GOOD BUG IS A DEAD BUG!
- lyssword, on 11/09/2007, -0/+2I lol'd
- yaddayaddayoda, on 11/09/2007, -0/+2In Soviet Russia...
I dunno, I got nothing. It should be something with a meteorite in it. - yomommanow, on 11/08/2007, -0/+2thanks for the link, pop this into Google Earth if you prefer
60.965, 101.86 - bdogm, on 11/09/2007, -0/+2...meteor impact site finds you?
- edwartica, on 11/09/2007, -1/+3Hooray for you!
- Haecceity, on 11/09/2007, -0/+2There's a more skeptical report from the BBC: http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/6239334. ...
"An impact would also have felled trees all around the crater ... yet there appeared to be trees older than 100 years still standing around Lake Cheko today." - finista, on 11/09/2007, -3/+5Pics or it didn't happen!
:P - Protoss, on 11/08/2007, -0/+2Notice how most of us haven't seen this article...so therefore it is current to us.
- Dysarthria, on 11/08/2007, -3/+4This event has been a mystery for just under a century, cool that they found the crater. Scary to think that meteor/comet with the power of an atomic bomb has hit this planet withing the last century.
- mrgreenjeans, on 11/08/2007, -3/+5I like this kind of Tunguska http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=8032325312 ...
- dr0psy, on 11/08/2007, -3/+4FTA: "The basin of Lake Cheko is not circular, deep, and steep like a typical impact crater, the scientists say. Instead it's elongated and shallow, about 1,640 feet (500 meters) long with a maximum depth of only 165 feet (50 meters). It also lacks the rim of debris usually found around typical impact craters, such as the Meteor Crater in Arizona."
why do they think this is the crater again?
everyone knows it was one of tesla's experiments - Scrappy1850, on 11/08/2007, -2/+3it's the largest natural nuclear explosion we have record of. (maybe)
- oderdigg, on 11/08/2007, -0/+1It sure stands out eh? Rivers everywhere and then this lake right in the middle of nowhere.. Good find!
- rholland356, on 11/08/2007, -0/+1Thanks for posting the link. I can't believe that the article did not feature a good photo or offer a link to Google maps.
- slashbot, on 11/09/2007, -3/+4Thats nice to know.....
- bswarts, on 11/09/2007, -0/+1it's called sarcasm...check into it
- ssundberg, on 11/08/2007, -0/+1How did anyone in the world have access to nuclear weaponry in 1907?
- weeeezzll, on 11/08/2007, -0/+1I could be wrong, but I don't believe that it was necessarily a nuclear explosion. Maybe just an explosion.
- almalax19, on 11/09/2007, -0/+1end argument!
- inactive, on 11/09/2007, -0/+1OK. I thought the object exploded about 10 miles up in the atmosphere. This sheds new light on the situation.Dugg.
- slashbot, on 11/09/2007, -2/+2That's nice to know....
- yaddayaddayoda, on 11/09/2007, -0/+0Well done, young grasshopper.
- kaplanal, on 11/11/2007, -0/+0It was an alien spaceship.What,there are still doubts about it?
- dr0psy, on 11/08/2007, -1/+1i forgot the /s at the end.. maybe.. ;)
- okmon, on 11/09/2007, -0/+0The title is a question? Not a statement?
- cnot3, on 11/09/2007, -1/+1only 15 megatons? asteroids don't have ***** on nukes I guess.
- dimitrisokolov, on 11/17/2007, -0/+0You mean it is right there where the trees were knocked over? Wow, what a discovery.
- Springs, on 11/09/2007, -5/+5more likely tesla's energy weapon, seriously.
- lledix, on 11/09/2007, -2/+1Pic of the lake bottom or it didn't happen!
- slashbot, on 11/09/2007, -4/+3Apparently some people are actually believing a myth about tesla's energy weapon....
- slashbot, on 11/09/2007, -3/+2doomsday device?
You've been reading too many comic books.... - slashbot, on 11/09/2007, -6/+4Seriously? You are nuts.
- FlamingWombat, on 11/09/2007, -3/+1This has been proven false. Lake Cheko is documented to have existed before the Tunguska Event, and therefore cannot be the impact crater for obvious reasons.
- inactive, on 11/09/2007, -6/+4So that's where Tunguska Blast got it's name from.
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