[meteorite-list] New Jersey Homeowners Tell of Meteorite Which Crashed In Their Bathroom

Ron Baalke baalke at zagami.jpl.nasa.gov
Wed Jan 10 18:08:08 EST 2007


http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,242909,00.html  

New Jersey Homeowners Tell of Unwanted Guest Which Crashed In Their
Bathroom: A Meteorite

Fox News
January 10, 2007

FREEHOLD TOWNSHIP, N.J.  -  A hole in the roof, a bathroom full of
debris and a strange, silvery rock near the toilet - the Nageswaran
family soon realized they needed an astronomer, not a contractor, to
fully explain what damaged their house.

Scientists determined it was a meteorite that crashed through the 
roof of their central New Jersey home more than a week ago.

While extraterrestrial rocks fall to the Earth with some regularity, 
it is rare for them to strike homes.

"The fact that something from outer space hit our house ... it's
overwhelming," Shankari Nageswaran said in an interview. She and her 
husband, Srinivasan Nageswaran, a 46-year-old consultant for 
information technology companies, are from India and have lived in 
Freehold Township since 2003.

On the night of Jan. 2, Srinivasan Nageswaran walked into his bathroom
and spotted a hole in the ceiling and small chunks of drywall and
insulation littering the room.

His mother, who has been staying with the family, recalled that she had
heard a loud boom a few hours earlier and thought it was a post-New
Year's fireworks explosion. But that didn't explain the mess.

The family initially thought an old patch job in the ceiling had come
loose. The mystery deepened after Shankari Nageswaran started cleaning
up. On the floor directly below the hole, under an evergreen bath mat,
the tile was dented. There was another dent on the wall.

Near the back of the toilet, she found a metallic rock, about the same
size and shape as the hole in the ceiling. The sparkly rock was the size
of a golf  ball but heavier at 13 ounces, or about as heavy as a can
of soup.

Her husband shined a flashlight through the hole in the ceiling, then
stuck a long stick in, and realized there was another hole in the roof.

It was not until the next morning that his father suggested the
mysterious rock came from outer space, and they called police.

Two geologists from Rutgers University along with an independent 
metallurgist, soon arrived.  They concluded that the rock - 
tentatively named "Freehold Township" - was an iron meteorite.

"It could have done great damage and destruction," Srinivasan 
Nageswaran marveled. "It could have hurt our people."

About 50 meteorites reach the Earth's surface each year, but with 
humans occupying only a small part of the planet, there is only one 
report every year or two of meteorites hitting buildings, said Tim 
McCoy, curator of the Smithsonian Institution's meteorite collection.

Every meteorite serves as a "poor man's space probe," yielding
information on how the solar system formed, McCoy said.

"There's been fewer than 5,000 meteorites found over the surface of 
the Earth in the recorded history of mankind," McCoy said. "Every 
time we get a new one, it's an important event."

Meteorites that hit buildings can be sold for thousands of dollars.

The Nageswarans have not decided what to do with their meteorite,
despite plenty of advice from family and friends. But they said they
want to make sure that the rock, which they have locked up at a bank,
serves an educational purpose.

"There are other dimensions to it than just the absolute `What is it
worth?'" Shankari Nageswaran said.




More information about the Meteorite-list mailing list