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

Melanie Matthews spacewoman2775 at hotmail.com
Tue Sep 22 17:25:30 EDT 2009


LOL I need that laugh! 

-----------
Melanie 
IMCA: 2975
eBay: metmel2775
Known on SkyRock Cafe as SpaceCollector09
 
Unclassified meteorites are like a box of chocolates... you never know what you're gonna get! 

----------------------------------------
> From: cynapse at charter.net
> To: meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com
> Date: Tue, 22 Sep 2009 11:26:04 -0500
> Subject: [meteorite-list] Another lying kid gets clueless paper to publish his story
>
> 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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