Researchers discover the first human whose death was recorded by meteorites |
Researchers have uncovered the earliest evidence of a person being hit and killed by a meteorite falling to Earth.
A group of Turkish researchers made the
discovery while searching through Turkish state archives and they found that
the event, which killed one person and injured another, occurred in what is now
Sulaymaniyah, Iraq, on Aug. 22, 1888.
There have long been claims and stories of
people being hit by meteorites. However, many of these stories are not
substantiated by sufficient evidence, be it a written report or some other
historical marker. "This issue might be due to the fact that either the
manuscript was written in a language other than English, or there is not enough
interest in historical records," the researchers wrote in a new study announcing
the findings.
But, in this study, the researchers
searched through Turkish state archives. "Almost every single event was
recorded in the archives. I mean, if you sneeze, it was recorded somehow.
Natural events, financial issues, governmental messaging, etc," lead
author Ozan Unsalan, an associate professor in the physics department at Ege
University told Space.com.
According to this report, the meteorite
that killed and severely injured two men was one of many that fell to Earth
during a 10-minute period of time. Additionally, people in a nearby city
reported witnessing a fireball falling to Earth.
Now, this team of researchers is still
working to find additional written and physical evidence of this impact event.
"We need to find a possible reply from Abdul Hamid, the sultan himself.
Also, we are very curious and need to find that real sample [of the meteorite]
delivered to the museum," Untalan said. "After that, we will classify
the sample type according to the scientific criteria," Untalan added that
they intend to continue searching through the archives for incredible records
such as this.
More recently, in 1954, Ann Hodges, a resident of eastern Alabama in the United
States was also hit by a meteorite and miraculously was (relatively) fine. She
was asleep on her living room couch when a softball-sized, 8.5-lb. (3.8
kilograms) fragment of a larger meteorite barreled through her ceiling and
struck her.
Hodges was surrounded by neighbors and,
soon, the media and was ultimately rushed to the hospital. However, while she
did end up with a pretty gnarly bruise, she was only mildly injured.
Even more recently, in 2009, Gerrit Blank,
a 14-year-old German boy, was
also struck by a meteorite. A pea-sized meteorite struck him, only mildly
injuring him but surely scaring him.
The findings from this new study were published on April 22 in the journal Meteoritics & Planetary Science.
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