For the first time in recorded history, a meteorite is
reported to have killed a person.
The incident happened Saturday (Feb. 6) when an object,
thought to be a meteorite, hit a college campus in Tamil Nadu, a
state in southern India,the Wall Street Journal reported. The impact killed
a man and injured three others, the WSJ said.
Officials found a 4-feet-deep (1.2 meters) crater in the
ground that contained "bluish black" rock fragments, G. Baskar, the
college's principal in Tamil Nadu's Vellore district, told the WSJ.
[When Space Attacks: The 6 Craziest Meteor
Impacts]
But NASA has yet to confirm whether the mysterious object
is indeed a meteorite. "Our Planetary Defense Coordination Office
is aware of the reports and is looking into it," said Laurie
Cantillo, a NASA spokeswoman. "So at this point the report is
unconfirmed."
The impact occurred at 12:30 p.m. local time (2 a.m. E.T.)
Saturday, when a bus driver was standing on the grass near the
college's cafeteria,according to Reuters. The driver, a 40-year-old man
named Kamaraj, was killed, and a student and two gardeners standing
nearby were injured, the WSJ reported.
"There was a noise like a big explosion," Baskar told the
WSJ. "It was an abnormal sound that could be heard till at least 3
kilometers [about 2 miles] away."
The explosion broke windows in neighboring classrooms and
cars, and prompted college officials to cancel classes until
Wednesday (Feb. 10), the WSJ said. Meanwhile, J. Jayalalithaa, the
chief minister of Tamil Nadu, announced that the driver's family
would receive 100,000 rupees ($1,470) and those injured would get
25,000 rupees ($368) in compensation, the WSJ reported.
If scientists confirm that a meteorite — and not space junk
or other debris — led to the man's death, this would be the first
scientifically proven meteorite fatality in modern times, NASA
said.
"It is so rare, there has never been a scientifically
confirmed report of someone being killed by a meteorite impact in
recorded history," Lindley Johnson, NASA's Planetary Defense
Officer, told Live Science in an email. "There have been reports of
injuries, but even those were extremely rare before the Chelyabinsk
event three years ago."
A meteorite wiped out the non-avian dinosaurs about 65
million years ago, leaving the gaping Chicxulub crater in Mexico;
and other meteorites have hit Earth throughout the years, including
the 2013 Chelyabinsk meteorite that injured about
1,000 people. However, most meteorites land in remote places,
including a 3.5-lb. (1.6 kilograms) rock researchers found in the
Australian Outback shortly after it crash-landed on Earth on Nov. 27, 2015.
There is evidence that space rocks once bombarded Earth
and the moon about 3.9 billion years ago, according to NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory (JPL). But "since that time, cratering appears
to have continued at a much slower and fairly uniform rate," the
JPL said.
Comets and asteroids continue to pockmark Earth when they
become meteorites, or space rocks that survive the plunge through
the planet's atmosphere and land on Earth. But most meteors burn up
high in the atmosphere, leaving streaks that people call shooting
stars.
However, larger space rocks do sometimes make landfall.
People saw a fireball streak across the sky from Kentucky to New
York on Oct. 9, 1992. Researchers found the remains, a 27-lb. (12 kg) meteorite that
punched a hole in a parked car, in Peekskill, New York, the JPL
reported.
There are ancient Chinese records of meteorites causing
human deaths, but there have been no human fatalities reported in
the past 1,000 years, the JPL said. Still, meteorites have injured
some people, includingAlabama housewife Ann Hodges, who awoke from a nap
on her couch when a 3-lb. (1.4 kg) meteorite fell through her house
and bruised her hip.
"An individual's chance of being killed by a meteorite is
small," the JPL said. "But the risk increases with the size of the
impacting comet or asteroid."
It may be too late for the dinosaurs, but today,
scientists are mapping near-Earth objects to learn which space
rocks pose the most danger to Earth, the JPL said.
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