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Space

Meteorite Strikes Indian Village 350

PS writes "The BBC is reporting that a village in eastern India was struck by a meteorite Saturday evening, wrecking several houses and injuring about twenty people. Fortunately, no one appears to have been killed by the impact or subsequent fires. CNN suggests that a second village near the impact site may have also been struck by part of the meteorite." Human/meteorite encounters are not entirely unheard of.
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Meteorite Strikes Indian Village

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:10PM (#7080226)
    Oh no, the sky is falling, the sky is falling! :)
  • by arcanumas ( 646807 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:10PM (#7080231) Homepage
    I can't believe Slashdot fell for such lies!
    Have you missed the ground-shaking documentary called .... X-files?
    Had you watched even parts of this research project you would know that this was a UFO crash site , cleverly disguised as a meteor crash.
  • I, for one, (Score:2, Funny)

    by RLiegh ( 247921 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:14PM (#7080273) Homepage Journal
    welcome our meteorite overlords, and would like to remind them that as a trusted hindu diety I could be useful in rounding up other hindus to toil away in their underground space mines.
  • by arcanumas ( 646807 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:15PM (#7080283) Homepage
    Chicken Little?
    I have no idea what that is.This could just as easily have been Asterix humour. ( the villagers fear nothing except for the sky falling on their heads)
  • by WIAKywbfatw ( 307557 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:15PM (#7080284) Journal
    ...you're new here, aren't you?
  • Any... (Score:4, Funny)

    by Gortbusters.org ( 637314 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:15PM (#7080286) Homepage Journal
    super powers from the meteorite yet? =D
  • by MongooseCN ( 139203 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:17PM (#7080298) Homepage
    ..a US senators house? Would NASA's funding for astroid impact studies double?
  • No way!! (Score:2, Funny)

    by Neutral23 ( 711400 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:17PM (#7080301)
    I thought the US government had hired Bruce Willis to take care of these meteorite thingies? Did he not manage to blow this one up in time? If not, did he survive the impact? Please, I need to know if Bruce is gonna be ok!!?!
  • by casings ( 257363 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:18PM (#7080306)
    .. then there was a tornado, and a flying saucer, and even a giant robot smashing the vast ammounts of constructions of huts, the mayor was reportedly quoted as saying "weaknesspays" as he rebuilds the village into a vast empire.
  • Re:Finally (Score:2, Funny)

    by tloh ( 451585 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:21PM (#7080323)
    Let's not forget that Tokyo is a prime destination also for extra-terrestrial visitors, living or otherwise. They're safe, though, since Godzilla always shows up to eliminate anything that happens to be threatening. Although the city usually....er, nevermind.
  • by identity0 ( 77976 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:23PM (#7080344) Journal
    Okay, before everyone else posts one of those stupid Slashdot in-jokes... Please post them as replies to this post.

    In Soviet Russia, all your asteroid are belong to India!
    Imagine a beowulf meteor shower of naked and petrified Natalie Portmans Slashdotting India!
    "Where's the BitTorrent link?"

    and last but not least...
    Darl McBride: "We have good evidence that Indian villagers are stealing our intellectual property to the UNIX system encoded in million-year-old rocks... evidence will be presented shortly. In Sanskirt."
  • by AJWM ( 19027 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:24PM (#7080353) Homepage
    The name of the east Indian village translates as "Smallville".
  • by JVert ( 578547 ) <corganbilly@hotmai[ ]om ['l.c' in gap]> on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:25PM (#7080367) Journal
    So what your saying is Tesla is alive and well conducting experiments [germano.com] in india?

  • by brodin ( 200847 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:28PM (#7080377)
    At least I can get behind outsourcing natural disasters. I'm sure other folks [meteorcrater.com] won't like it though.
  • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:31PM (#7080399)
    "Was it running Linux?"

    Shut up and just be grateful it wasn't a beowulf cluster.

    KFG
  • IT Jobs (Score:2, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:32PM (#7080403)
    I guess IT jobs aren't the only thing heading to India now!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:39PM (#7080445)
    I, for one, welcome our redundant joke managing overlords.
  • by Kethinov ( 636034 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:39PM (#7080449) Homepage Journal
    You have it backwards, it was Soviet Russia that impacted on a meteor.
    There is some truth to that statement despite the reference to the cliched joke. After all, Earth and all contries on it are a moving body. ;)
  • by dswensen ( 252552 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:48PM (#7080520) Homepage
    I for one welcome our new meteorite overlords
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:50PM (#7080531)
    damn...i pushed too hard to get it out.
  • by Linker3000 ( 626634 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:52PM (#7080538) Journal
    Er, hello, has anyone seen our bluetooth-controlled homebrew robot. It was kinda zooming along when it sorta flew out of range (ie more than 5m away from us) when Joe, who was controlling it, dropped the RC when his Segway sorta 'bucked' for no apparent reason and he was thrown to the floor (weird that--anyone else had this happen to them?). We think one of its methanol power cells might be leaking too so stand well back if it comes your way 'cos Joe says it might take off with a 'whoosh' and behave sorta like an ion propulsion drive--who knows where the damn thing may land.

    If you see our robot, please email us. Don't try instant messaging us cos our copy of Trillian seems to have stopped working and our Cingular GSM cell phone seems to be dead too (weird that--anyone else had this happen to them?)

    Joe reckons all our comms breaking down has something to do with our uni campus being built under a power line so he's off to put his foil hat back on, but I did notice our Ukranian lab assistant wandering around with a hammer just now and I was a little suspicious when he asked me if I had any old hardware I didn't want, and I'm sure 'deztroy' isn't the name of his home town, as he claimed.

    Keep your eyes open for us. Thanks.

    PS: Why is Darl gonna present his evidence 'sanskirt' - is he a cross-dresser? Does he like to be called Darlene out of business hours?
  • by kfg ( 145172 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @06:52PM (#7080541)
    I mean really, really big.

    Bigger than an Olympic sized swimming pool. Bigger than a football field. Bigger even than a San Francisco, which is the largest unit that the human mind can comprehend.

    Do you think that NASA can track every object in San Francisco? No, of course not. Even the fedral Narcs haven't figured out how to do that yet (although they're working on it).

    Right now, just out beyond Pluto, there could be some whacked out ex-groupie of Wavy Gravy plummeting toward earth in her rusty old VW Microbiotic bus and we won't even know until it takes out Kansas.

    Just hope she isn't driving uninsured. Old hippies do shit like that. They think it's some sort of political statement or something.

    Anyway, the point is, space is big. Shit happens. Don't worry, be happy. You won't even feel a thing.

    KFG
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @07:04PM (#7080599)
    Iraqi Information Minister:

    No Slashdot in-jokes needed. There was no meteor. There are no Americans in Baghdad. These are all just American lies.
  • by RedTyde ( 707025 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @07:56PM (#7080878)
    Fortunately, no one appears to have been killed by the impact or subsequent fires.
    I guess the forunately part depends on whether or not your job has been recently outsourced to India. ;)
  • by RedTyde ( 707025 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @08:09PM (#7080952)
    Actually, they say things like: "We don't need anyone spreading more panic now."

    The Sun Will Explode In Less Than Six Years! [216.239.39.104]

    The Sun Will Explode In Less Than Six Years! Wednesday September 18, 2002

    By GEORGE SANFORD

    The Sun is overheating and will soon blow up . . . taking Earth and the rest of the solar system with it, scientists warn.

    The alert was issued after an international satellite photographed a massive explosion on the surface of the Sun that sent a plume of fire 30 times longer than the diameter of Earth blasting into space.

    "It's a sign that the Sun is ready to blow . . . I don't know if I can put it any more plainly than that," says Dutch astrophysicist Dr. Piers Van der Meer, a top expert affiliated with the European Space Agency.

    "It will be like a nuclear bomb trillions of times more powerful than the one dropped on Hiroshima going off at the center of our solar system.

    "When that happens Earth will be instantly incinerated along with all life on it. It's like when a marshmallow falls into a fire, blackens and melts."

    Scientists say the problem is the Sun is literally getting too hot.

    The core temperature of the Sun is normally 27 million degrees Fahrenheit. But in recent years it's climbed to an alarming 49 million degrees, says Dr. Van der Meer, leader of a team of Amsterdam-based space scientists who've been tracking the changes in the Sun.

    "It's quite similar to when a star goes supernova at the end of its life," Dr. Van der Meer explains. "Over the past 11 years, we've seen our Sun go through changes frighteningly like those that took place in Kepler's Star right before it was observed going supernova in 1604."

    Temperatures on the surface of the Sun have been steadily climbing over the past decade, the scientists say.

    "This, we believe, not man-made pollution, is responsible for global warming and the alarming effects that we've seen take place on Earth such as the melt-down of the Antarctic ice shelves," asserted Dr. Van der Meer.

    The July 1 images were taken by the space-based Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), a satellite designed to study the internal structure of the Sun and operated jointly by NASA and the European Space Agency.

    "The explosion . . . known technically as an eruptive prominence . . . was colossal," said Dr. Van der Meer. "This is the final warning sign we've all been dreading."

    The Dutch scientists calculate that if temperatures keep climbing at the current rate the Sun will be unable to sustain itself.

    "It will blow apart like an out-of-control nuclear reactor within six years," predicts Dr. Van der Meer.

    NASA refuses to confirm the Euro-pean scientists' assertions and a White House source said, "We don't need anyone spreading more panic now."

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @08:15PM (#7080990)
    evidence will be presented shortly. In Sanskirt.

    *Sanskirt* is actually a pretty good joke itself (i.e., "I'd like to see Natalie Portman sanskirt.")
  • by Xzzy ( 111297 ) <sether@@@tru7h...org> on Sunday September 28, 2003 @08:19PM (#7081005) Homepage
    i have it on good authority that all the different names for space rocks ending up on earth were created as some sort of scientist inner circle challenge to confuse common men.

    As we all know, the first attempt was in naming stone spikes that grow in caves, but unfortunatley many people actually learned what the proper terms were.

    Names for space rocks is merely version 2.0.
  • by line.at.infinity ( 707997 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @08:45PM (#7081128) Homepage Journal
    Wonder what the Orissans have done to piss off Jesus/Allah/Krishna so much?

    They converted to Buddhism?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday September 28, 2003 @09:08PM (#7081230)
    Hmm, there's a couple million dinosaur scholars that would beg differ.
  • by 3waygeek ( 58990 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @10:07PM (#7081513)
    Well, the Simpsons [snpp.com] appear to agree with you.
  • by njchick ( 611256 ) on Sunday September 28, 2003 @11:13PM (#7081805) Journal
    Bad karma. Perhaps they were trolling too much.

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