Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.meteorites.ru/menu/press-e/itar-tass-e.html
Дата изменения: Sun Feb 17 23:50:14 2013
Дата индексирования: Thu Feb 27 20:16:06 2014
Кодировка: Windows-1251

Поисковые слова: rho ophiuchi
THE LABORATORY OF METEORITICS, VERNADSKY INSTITUTE, RAS
The laboratory of meteoritics
Press about meteorites

Meteorite Press

Pestovo "space rock"
Meteor poltergeist

Main menu

Main
About laboratory
News
Our publications
Museum of extraterrestial material
Meteorite collection
Lunar sample collection
Meteorite web resources
FAQ
Contact Us
Guest Book

METEOR CAUSED LESOTHO 'POLTERGEIST'

LESOTHO. An outbreak of ghost activity that struck Lesotho last year has been found to have been the result of a spectacular meteor shower. Some 400 mystery rocks were collected

Tuesday. 22 April. 2003. 07:33 GMT 08:33 UK

An outbreak of ghost activity that struck Lesotho last year has been found to have been the result of a spectacular meteor shower. On 21 July, a loud noise in the sky was heard over most of the country. Then in the village of Boqate Ha Sofonia. objects began to fall on the roofs of houses.

'Malino Mantsoe, one of the village residents, saw a large stone smash into the low-walled cooking area in front of her house, before knocking over and cracking a plastic container.

She blamed a "thokolosi" - a poltergeist - and sprinkled holy water around her house and on the stone. No more stones fell.

"Matukuie Khoeletsana. another resident, also had stones bounce on her roof - and kept them to prove it was no had dream.

Investigation:

Now the cause of the mystery rocks has been found to have been a meteorite.

A rock weighing perhaps a tonne, which had been circline the sun for 4.600 million years, had finally intercepted another hodv in the solar system - the Earth. It arrived at perhaps 50 to 100 times the speed of sound, and hitting the atmosphere at this speed, exploded into thousands of pieces which had fallen to earth over nine different villages.

A team from the National University- of Lesotho went to investigate. and with the help of schoolchildren and local residents collected over 400 different stones rangine from just a few grams to over a kilogram.

There were a number of champion collectors, including a well-known local youth nicknamed Ramanaka. or "Father of Horns", because of his head-dress decorated with horns and a portrait of Nelson Mandela.

The Thuathe meteorite, as it has been christened, has ensured that Lesotho will now have a place in the science of meteoritics.


• By David Ambrose
BBC Focus On Africa magazine
      
WebDesign 2002