[meteorite-list] Chelyabinsk Gripped By 'Meteor Fever'

From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 26 Feb 2013 10:50:40 -0800 (PST)
Message-ID: <201302261850.r1QIoe9g011120_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov>

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-21554326

Chelyabinsk gripped by 'meteor fever'
By Oxana Vozhdaeva and Oleg Boldyrev, BBC Russian Service, Chelyabinsk region
BBC News
February 26, 2013

Russia's Chelyabinsk region is gripped by a kind of meteor fever, with
thousands combing through fields trying to find meteorite fragments.

Near the villages of Deputatsky and Pervomaysky, an hour's drive from
Chebarkul city, whole families of meteorite hunters are hard at work.

The meteorite passed over the area before reportedly crashing into the
Chebarkul lake, and the snowy fields are covered with human footprints.

The nearby home of the Belizkaya family was filled with soot from their
oven after the meteorite explosion, which caused the ceiling to crack.

Initially frightened, now the family calls that day their "rebirth", and
have so far found three 1cm-wide meteorite fragments.

"We came with all the family, we do it out of interest, really, this is
such a memento of that event," says Elena Belizkaya of the hoard. "We'll
keep it at home for now, but if there's a chance to sell it, we'll sell some,
of course!"

Meteorite hunters require no particular expertise as the hunt is relatively
simple - fragments leave a small crater similar to a mouse's hole. If you
find such a hole in a bank of snow you can be fairly certain - it is either
a mouse or a meteorite.

The BBC team found four tiny stones within five minutes. Most of those
fragments found near Deputatsky are pea-sized, but some can be much bigger -
more like golf balls.

The biggest fragment we saw weighed about 100g. It was found by a citizen
of Chelyabinsk, who said he had received several offers from friends in
Moscow.

"It's like hunting or fishing," said one meteorite hunter. "When you see an
animal, your heart starts to beat fast, and when you're fishing - it's like
pulling the fishing rod and thinking there's something extraordinary. This
is the same - you see a tiny hole, try it, and here it is."

Scientists from the meteorite laboratory at the Russian Academy
of Science collecting samples in Chelyabinsk say the more meteorite hunters
the merrier, because there are only a couple of days of good weather left
for the search.

Any wind or snowfall will destroy meteorite traces, and small fragments will
simply not be found until the spring, when the fields will be covered by
tall grass.

The minerals of which the meteorite is made are common and not of great
interest, says junior research associate Dmitry Sadilenko.

But size matters. The Chebarkul space rock was one of the biggest objects
to break up in our atmosphere in 100 years. And the bigger the fragment
found, the more it is worth.

What's more, according to Russia's Subsoil Law, there are no legal grounds
for prohibiting people from collecting, selling and exporting meteorite
fragments.

However, potentially lucrative finds are already raising eyebrows. The
internet is full of ads selling so-called fragments of the Chebarkul
meteorite, with prices ranging from a few thousand to 500,000 roubles
(?11,000).

The Chelyabinsk police department has already questioned one "businessman" -
a resident of Emanzhelinka village - who has sold several fragments for
15,000 roubles. He could be charged with fraud if the stones are found to be
fake.

Lucrative hole in the ice

Although scientists from the Ural Federal University have declared Chebarkul
Lake to be the location of the main meteorite fall - suggesting a fragment
as wide as 50cm may be lying on the lake bed - the Chelyabinsk authorities
say they cannot confirm this.

Chelyabinsk deputy governor Igor Murog told the BBC that the large ice-hole
thought to have been made by the meteorite could equally have been made by a
fisherman.

Locals charge the price of an expensive Moscow taxi ride to take meteorite
hunters to the Chebarkul lake ice hole Meteor hunters, though, seem not to
care about official statements: Many are drilling holes in the ice and
lowering magnets attached to ropes into the water. For now they are finding
mostly tiny fragments.

Even Chebarkul Mayor Andrey Orlov joined in the hunt, sending divers into the
lake's cold water soon after the meteorite fell, only for their mission to be
thwarted by silt on the lake-bed. The hunt will continue on Monday.

He has announced a competition for business ideas as Chebarkul tries to profit
from the global attention given to its meteorite landing.

And locals are already cashing in, offering to shuttle visitors to the site
of the now-famous ice-hole via horse and cart - for the price of an expensive
Moscow taxi fare.
Received on Tue 26 Feb 2013 01:50:40 PM PST


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