Friday, August 9, 2013

Russian Meteor Part of 656' Wide Asteroid? (Video)




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Russian Meteor Part of 656' Wide Asteroid? (Video)



By Susan Duclos With the recent news that there may be a gang of followers, along the same trajectory of the meteor that hit Russia back in February, the Daily Mail report that the 55-foot wide, 10,000 ton meteor that hit Russia, causing a 50-foot hole in a frozen lake near Chelyabinsk, is incredible timing. It is believed that the meteor that crashed in Russia was part of the Apollo asteroid called 2011 EO40, that had broken off and came crashing to Earth,blasting out windows, disrupting mobile connections and collapsing buildings. The 2011 EO40 is said to originally have been a 656-foot wide asteroid which broke apart. The meteor fireball, also known as a superbolide, is the biggest space rock to have hit earth in more than a hundred years and the shockwave caused by the crash was greater than 30 Hiroshima nuclear bombs according to NASA scientists at the time.









Marc Faber: A 1987-Style Crash Is Coming



CNBC The S&P has rallied 19 percent in 2013, which is impressive by any measure. But the market did far better in 1987, when stocks added more than 30 percent from the beginning of the year to Aug. 8. The problem?






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