AW: [meteorite-list] meat-eorite

Martin Altmann altmann at meteorite-martin.de
Wed Jul 26 03:06:05 EDT 2006


Norway seems to be in a meteorite hysteria now,
I'm glad that I'm not an Norwegian expert...
Imagine, what they'll have to suffer soon from hundreds of wrong alerts
because of the perseids!

Mike&Morten, my condolence to you in advance :-)

Buckleboo!
Martin



-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht-----
Von: meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com
[mailto:meteorite-list-bounces at meteoritecentral.com] Im Auftrag von Sterling
K. Webb
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 26. Juli 2006 08:59
An: cynapse at charter.net; meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
Betreff: Re: [meteorite-list] meat-eorite

Hi,

    What's the classification?

    I suppose it would have to be carbonacious...


Sterling K. Webb
-----------------------------------------------------
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Darren Garrison" <cynapse at charter.net>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Wednesday, July 26, 2006 1:16 AM
Subject: [meteorite-list] meat-eorite


I was searching the English side of "http://www.aftenposten.no" to see if I
could find anything new about the new fall, and came up with this article:

http://www.aftenposten.no/english/local/article516591.ece

UFO was ... a cat
Most observations of mysterious flying objects in the sky are eventually
identified and explained, but the UFO and suspected meteorite over Lardal,
Norway got the highly unusual solution of being attributed to a cat.
Observers heard an explosion and spotted a fireball in the night sky over 
Lardal
on March 14. Now authorities have managed to puzzle out the evidence, and 
say a
housecat caused the sighting, NRK Vestfold reports.

Sheriff Lars Helge Sogn believes a cat climbed up a high-tension power line 
and
burst into flames after striking the high voltage cable with its tail.

The heat from the short circuit caused the wooden mast to burn, and it is 
most
likely this that appeared to be a fireball on the horizon on the night of 
the
mysterious sighting.

The local electricity company recorded no power outage due to the fire, 
which
made it harder to unravel the mystery. But the discovery of a dead cat under

the
power mast made them double-check, and a four-second glitch in their records

was
found on the evening of the 14th.

Before the feline solution the local sheriff had contacted Oslo University
astrophysicists, only to find that eyewitness reports of a fireball lasting 
up
to half an hour could not be a landing meteorite.

Cats don't burn so long either, but part of the wooden mast set alight by 
the
unlucky tabby is now considered to be the explanation for the local mystery.
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