Experts: Latvia Crater a Hoax
Scientists Say Shovels Dug What Was Originally Thought a Meteorite Site
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A crater 27 feet wide and 9 feet deep, reportedly created by a meteorite-like object that crashed into a meadow in the Mazsalaca region of northern Latvia, near the Estonian border, is seen on Monday. Scientists say the crater is a hoax, created by digging. (AP Photo)
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Experts in the Baltic country rushed to the site after reports that a metorite-like object had crashed late Sunday in the Mazsalaca region near the Estonian border.
"This is not a real crater. It is artificial," Uldis Nulle, a scientist at the Latvian Environment, Geology and Meteorology Center, said after inspecting the site on Monday.
Earlier Uldis had said his first impression late Sunday was that the 27-foot (nine-meter) wide and nine foot (three-meter) deep crater had been caused by a meteorite. He said there was smoke coming out of the hole when he arrived.
Uldis and other experts who examined the hole in daylight on Monday said it was too tidy to have been caused by a meteorite.
"It's artificial, dug by shovel," said Girts Stinkulis, a geologist at the University of Latvia.
Dainis Ozols, a nature conservationist, said he believes someone dug the hole and tried to make it look like a meteorite crater by burning some pyrotechnic compound at the bottom. He added he would analyze some samples taken from the site.
Sigita Pildava, a spokeswoman for the State Police, said it wasn't immediately clear whether police would open an investigation into the hoax.
Inga Vetere of the Fire and Rescue Service said they received a call about the alleged meteorite on Sunday evening from an eyewitness. She said a military unit was dispatched to the site and found that radiation levels were normal.
Experts outside Latvia said it would be unusual for such a large meteorite to hit the Earth. The planet is constantly bombarded with objects from outer space, but most burn up in the atmosphere and never reach the surface.
In 2007, a meteorite crashed near Lake Titicaca in Peru, causing a crater about 40 feet (12 meters) wide and 15 feet (five meters) deep.
Asta Pellinen-Wannberg, a meteorite expert at the Swedish Institute of Space Research, said she didn't know the details of the Latvian incident, but that a rock would have to be at least three feet (one meter) in diameter to create a hole that size.
Henning Haack, a lecturer at Copenhagen University's Geological Museum, said when it comes to alleged meteorite crashes, "there always is a pretty large margin of error."
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- Local telecommunication company Tele2 took responsibility for this! They say it was meant as an experiment and I guess as marketing trick! :) I think it's a very good joke, that also shows that not everything that you hear on TV our read in newspapers is true! I liked column which Eriks Stendzenieks wrote on this.
- Reply to this comment
- Local telecommunication company Tele2 took responsibility for this! They say it was meant as an experiment and I guess as marketing trick! :) I think it's a very good joke, that also shows that not everything that you hear on TV our read in newspapers is true! I liked column which Eriks Stendzenieks wrote on this.
- Reply to this comment
- Local telecommunication company Tele2 took responsibility for this! They say it was meant as an experiment and I guess as marketing trick! :) I think it's a very good joke, that also shows that not everything that you hear on TV our read in newspapers is true! I liked column which Eriks Stendzenieks wrote on this.
- Reply to this comment
- I wonder what the purpose of such a hoax would be??
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- In Indiana we wait until it rains and sell the lots as 'Waterfront".
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- "A crater 27 feet wide and 9 feet deep"
In Rockford, Illinois they call that a pothole. - Reply to this comment
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