Saturday February 16, 2013
Divers scour Russian lake after meteor strike injures 1,200
MOSCOW: Divers scoured the bottom of a Russian lake on Saturday for fragments of a meteorite that plunged to Earth in a blinding fireball whose shockwave injured 1,200 people and damaged thousands of homes.
The 10-tonnes meteor streaked across the Urals region on Friday just as the world braced for a close encounter with a large asteroid that left some Russian officials calling for the creation of a global system of space object defence.
The unpredicted meteor strike ground traffic to a halt in the industrial city of Chelyabinsk as residents poured out on the streets to watch the light show before hovering for safety when a sonic boom rang out directly overhead.
Shattered glass caused most of the injuries. Doctors said some sustained more serious wounds from doors that were blasted off hinges and ceiling collapses. About 50 people were recovering in hospitals early Saturday.
Officials counted 2,962 buildings ranging from hospitals and schools to regular households suffering from shattered glass and cracked walls.
"We have a special team working... that is now assessing the seismic stability of buildings," Emergencies Minister Vladimir Puchkov told residents as he inspected the damage in the central Russian city.
"We will be especially careful about switching the gas back on," he said in televised remarks.
A piece of the meteor - called a meteorite once it hits the ground - was believed to have plunged into the Chelyabinsk region's frozen Lake Chebarkul.
But the six divers who searched its waters for three hours on Saturday were able to finding nothing but mud and silt.
"They immediately discovered that the water's visibility was zero and that the bottom was covered with 1.5 metres (five feet) of sticky mud," a recovery team member told Russian media.
The emergencies minister stressed that no meteorite fragments had been discovered anywhere in the region so far despite some 20,000 rescuers and recovery workers being dispatched to the region on Friday.
The meteor explosion appears to be one of the most stunning cosmic events above Russia since the 1908 Tunguska Event in which a massive blast most scientists blame on an asteroid or a comet ripped through Siberia.
Scientists at the US space agency NASA estimated that the amount of energy released in the atmosphere was about 30 times greater than the force of the nuclear bomb dropped on the Japanese city of Hiroshima during World War II.
"We would expect an event of this magnitude to occur once every 100 years on average," said Paul Chodas of NASA's Near-Earth Object Program Office.
"When you have a fireball of this size we would expect a large number of meteorites to reach the surface and in this case there were probably some large ones," he said in a statement published on the NASA website.
The drama in Russia developed just hours before an asteroid - a space object similar to a tiny planet orbiting the sun - whizzed safely past Earth at the unprecedented distance of 17,200 miles (27,000 kilometers).
That put it closer to the ground then some distant satellites and sent off alarm bells ringing in some Russian circles about this being the time for joint global action on the space safety front.
"Instead of fighting on Earth, people should be creating a joint system of asteroid defence," the Russian parliament's foreign affairs committee chief Alexei Pushkov wrote on his Twitter account late Friday.
"Instead of creating a (military) European space defence system, the United States should join us and China in creating the AADS - the Anti-Asteroid Defence System," the close ally of President Vladimir Putin wrote.
The US space agency said the 2012 DA 14 asteroid's passing was "the closest-ever predicted approach to Earth for an object this large."
NASA estimates that a smallish asteroid such as the 2012 DA 14 flies close to Earth every 40 years on average while only hitting the planet once every 1,200 years. - AFP
- Drizzle fails to dampen Citrawarna 1Malaysia launch
- Najib: Change must be based on rule of law not the street
- Anwar: Conditions in Jusuf Kalla's polls pact not met
- Anwar Ibrahim says GLC posts not for PKR politicians
- Home Ministry to work with MCMC, MCS to monitor unlawful social media content
- Big crowd at Pakatan rally at Dataran PJ (Live Updates)
- PKR rejects Najib's 'insincere' call for reconciliation, says Saifuddin
- Saiful Bukhari is now a married man
- NGOs stage protest against Perak DAP's Ngeh
- Police to appeal rejection of trio's remand, says Zahid
- MCMC: Suspect who allegedly insulted Sultan of T’ganu on Facebook detained
- Single-party BN is 'new wine in an old bottle', says Chow
- PKR members should get top GLC roles, says Suhaimi
- Rela member in coma after being hit by escaping motorcyclist
- Blackmail victim reaches end of tether
- Travel Picks: Top 10 golf resorts around the world
- Chinese premier criticizes EU move on trade measures
- Justice Department opposes AMR's $20 million severance for CEO Horton
- News Corp to take charge of up to $1.4 billion this quarter
- Wall Street Week Ahead: Investors look for signs in the rally's break
- Unhappy with how your fave series is faring? Amazon gives you a say
- Visa, Mastercard ask U.S. court to declare card fees are lawful
- Wall Street posts first weekly loss since mid-April on Fed angst
- IMF's Lagarde escapes formal investigation in court
- Politics of development pays dividend
- A thematic play seen
- Sarawak counters hogging the limelight
- Getting GST acceptance will be tough
- A yen for the unloved dollar standard
- Bitten by the music bug
- Rosberg on pole for Monaco Grand Prix
- South Korea in seventh heaven
- Make betting legal, says top Indian body
- NBA: Pacers edge Heat to even series
- Arat: Istanbul bid to host the 2020 Olympic is about building bridges
- Golf: Two share lead at inaugural rain-hit Pure Silk LPGA
- Golf: Kuchar leads weather-hit Colonial
- Squash: Matthew offers a message with a warning
- Golf: Molinari leads but Ryder Cup colleagues crash out
- Tennis: Djokovic blocks Nadal path to Paris super eight
- MSSM meet: 15 records in five days augur well for M’sian athletics
- Indonesian Rexy's advise to M'sian team: Stick together as a family
- Yongbo: Beat us if you can, not good for China to win all the time
- Thai Ratchanok wins many hearts with her gritty display
- Squash:M'sian Nicol beats New Zealander in straight sets to reach last four
- Big crowd at Pakatan rally at Dataran PJ (Live Updates)
- Chua: Cops right to act against those inciting racial hatred
- Robber shot dead after picking on wrong ‘victim’
- Painting of merry old couple covered up to prevent accident at Chew Jetty
- Malaysia a favourite of Muslim travellers
- Saiful Bukhari is now a married man
- Trio walk free after court turns down remand request
- PKR members should get top GLC roles, says Suhaimi
- EC: Blackout photo is a fake
- DPM: Turning BN into a single party must be evaluated in detail
- Malaysia a favourite of Muslim travellers
- Living through your midlife
- Who has the better chance of bagging that high-salary post?
- Big crowd at Pakatan rally at Dataran PJ (Live Updates)
- Sarawak counters hogging the limelight
- Klang Valley a haven for UOA Dev
- More can be done to promote private retirement scheme
- Painting of merry old couple covered up to prevent accident at Chew Jetty
- Saiful Bukhari is now a married man
- Travel Picks: Top 10 golf resorts around the world

