Meteorite crashes in India

Villagers and farmers gather around the crater formed when a suspected meteorite crashed into a rice paddy in Madhubani district in India’s Bihar state (AFP Photo/STR / MANILA BULLETIN)

.

India farmers shocked as suspected meteorite crashes into rice field

.

A suspected meteorite the size of a football plunged into a rice field in eastern India, startling farmers, authorities said Thursday.

.

–THIS SPACE BELOW IS RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –

Onlookers said the light brown-colored object sent them fleeing from the field when it fell at their rural village on Wednesday afternoon, sending up smoke.

“The farmers were working in the paddy field when this heavy rock fell from the sky with a very loud noise,” Shirsat Kapil Ashok, the magistrate for Madhubani district in Bihar state, told AFP.

.

–THIS SPACE BELOW IS RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –

The villagers returned after the smoke subsided and pulled the rock out from its four-feet-deep crater.

“We saw it has very strong magnetic properties, some shine and weighs around 15 kilograms (33 pounds),” Ashok added.

.

–THIS SPACE BELOW IS RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –

The find is being analyzed by scientists as a possible meteorite.

Meteors are particles of dust and rock that usually burn up as they pass through Earth’s atmosphere, with those that survive the fall known as meteorites.

In 2016 authorities in southern India’s Tamil Nadu state said a meteorite killed a bus driver and injured three others.

.

–THIS SPACE BELOW IS RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –

While Indian scientists backed the claim of the regional authorities, the US space agency NASA later said did not believe the object was a meteorite.

In February 2013 a meteorite plunged over Russia’s Ural Mountains, creating a shockwave that injured around 1,200 people and damaged thousands of homes.

.

–THIS SPACE BELOW IS RESERVE FOR YOUR ADVERTISEMENT –

It's only fair to share...Share on FacebookShare on Google+Tweet about this on TwitterEmail this to someonePrint this page