[meteorite-list] Another lying kid gets clueless paper to publish his story

Meteorites USA eric at meteoritesusa.com
Tue Sep 22 11:53:52 EDT 2009


Hi Darren, List,

That is perhaps the worst reporting and story I've read on meteorites to 
date. Not to mention the "expert opinion" from the University of 
Birmingham's "Meteorologist".. ???Really???

Headline should read:
"Lucky kid astronomer listens to spacemen and finds hot and holey moon 
rock in backyard!" and a meteorologist confirms? What does meteorology 
have to do with meteorites???? ;)

Any other ideas for headlines appropriate for this article?

Regards,
Eric




Darren Garrison wrote:
> Caution-- this story contains such a dense concentration of misinformation that
> there is the risk of it tearing a hole in reality and suck you into your
> monitor.
>
> Photo in the link.
>
> http://www.birminghammail.net/news/top-stories/2009/09/22/meteorite-rocks-bruno-s-world-97319-24745554/
>
>
> 'Meteorite' rocks Bruno's world
>
> Sep 22 2009 by Vicky Farncombe, Birmingham 
>
> STARGAZING student Bruno Bertullo had a wish come true when what he believes to
> be a meteorite landed in his grandmother’s back garden.
>
> The Spanish 16-year-old was playing on the computer in his bedroom when out of
> the corner of his eye he saw a fireball whizz past the window.
>
> He ran down to the garden in Blackford Road, Sparkhill, where he discovered an
> unusual looking rock.
>
> It was the size of his hand and covered in holes.
>
> “I tried to touch it but it was very hot so I ran back into the kitchen to fetch
> the tongs,” said Bruno.
>
> “I put it in some cold water and straight away the water went hot.
>
> “It’s very strange. I have never seen anything like it in my life and it wasn’t
> in the garden before.” The keen astronomer studied the rock and looked up its
> structure on the internet.
>
> “I think it’s a meteorite,” he said. “I know from listening to spacemen that
> meteorites look broken and their surface is full of pores – just like this one.”
>
> Bruno, who moved from Madrid to his grandmother’s house to practise his English,
> is a sports student at Solihull College.
>
> He said he was “really excited” to find the moon rock.
>
> “I’m very interested in astronomy. I never thought I should be so lucky as to
> find a meteorite,” he said.
>
> Meteorologist John Wright from the University of Birmingham said it was “very
> likely” that the rock fell from outer space.
>
> “The earth’s orbit has been passing through a cloud of meteorites in the last
> few weeks so I’m not surprised,” he said. “We’ve had a lot of people witnessing
> shooting stars. If it is a meteorite it will be very dark and heavy.”
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