Cs' birthday - 2011 - Rain of meteorites in Kenya!

Laura

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Notice the date in the article! How fitting!

http://www.sott.net/articles/show/234590-Kenya-s-Rain-of-Meteorites

Statistically, every year roughly 1,400 meteorites of pebble size and larger fall somewhere on Earth's lands. But few of these are ever found - and even fewer (about 3%) are actually seen as they arrive. Because they're rare, these witnessed falls are especially prized both by scientists (because the stones are fresh and unweathered) and by meteorite collectors (they command higher prices).

As it happens, a bunch of meteorites fell from the sky over east-central Africa on July 16th, and only now are details of this extraterrestrial special delivery coming to light.

On that morning, residents in villages near Thika, Kenya, heard a loud explosion but didn't know what to make of the strange stones that fell around them. Local police were called to investigate a sizable one that dropped into a cornfield and carted it off for further study.

This is a desperately poor region, and it didn't take long for local villagers to realize that these plain-looking rocks might be worth something. Word of the event soon reached meteorite hunters, and within hours the chase was on.

Michael Farmer wasted no time traveling from his Tucson home to Kenya. By the morning of July 21st, just five days after the fall, he'd acquired more than 2 pounds of fragments. By then hundreds of locals had fanned out in the hope of finding some cosmic gold.

"Upon arriving at the fall location," he reports, "I met a guy who knew a girl who saw a stone land only 5 feet from her in a coffee field while working at 10:30 a.m. when the explosions rocked the sky." Farmer returned to Kenya again just a week later, this time accompanied by Florda dealer Greg Hupé.

All told, meteorites fell in four different villages. The fall will likely be known officially as Kihum Wiri, the place where the largest pieces were found. An analysis by researcher Laurence Garvie at Arizona State University indicates that these are ordinary chondrites, the most common meteorite type.

So far, more than 30 pounds (14 kg) have been scooped up. "I paid either for stones or for workers and supervisors to monitor the workers, money none of them could refuse," Farmer explains. "Most of them got a year or years of salary for stones worthless to them. It changed their lives."
 
Happy birthday C’s! 26 is a good age, it means your prefrontal cortex should now be fully developed and with it comes more rational thought! It’s also the age that many are starting to build their careers that will serve them for the rest of their life.

I mean it’s not an entirely silly analogy, the C’s communications and the team involved have gone through phases of development, through corrupting influences and stumbling blocks along the way, and are now in a phase of maturity after years of “universe university”. And Laura’s new book could be like the PHD thesis, a culmination of the studies thus far.

Speaking of 26 - fun fact - the 26 brightest stars of Cassiopaea were named by Johann Bayer, a German cartographer. Here’s his engraving (colorized) of her:


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What kind of discoveries are in store for the next 26 years? “Wait and see!”
 
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