German Boy Hit by Meteorite Lives to Tell About It
From time to time, kids have accidents on their way to school. Maybe they crash their bicycle and scrape their knee. Or, maybe they twist their ankle stepping off the sidewalk. Or, even worse, a car might hit them while they cross the street. Gerrit Blank, a 14-year-old German boy, has one of these stories, although it's a little less ordinary. According to a report from the Telegraph, a meteorite entered Earth's atmosphere at 30,000 mph and struck Blank, who somehow walked away with only a three-inch cut on his hand (and a sweet new show-and-tell item).
Blank told the Telegraph that he saw a "huge ball of light," felt a pain in his hand, and heard "an enormous bang" that left his ears ringing like a pair of church bells. The meteorite's impact knocked the boy down and left a one-foot-wide crater in the ground. The Telegraph stated that the odds of surviving a blow from a meteorite are one in a million. If true, Blank basically won the lottery -- the prize being his life.
While this sounds like a tall tale, Ansgar Kortem, director of the Walter Hohmann Observatory in Germany, confirmed that the rock was a meteorite through chemical tests. Kortem told the Telegraph that meteorites enter the Earth's atmosphere every day, but most burn up before they reach the surface. Those that do make it that far, six times out of seven, land in water.
We're still not sure if we believe Blank's story. If it is true, he should count his lucky stars (or meteorites) that he's still alive. In 1954, a meteorite struck a woman in Alabama, and she lived to tell about it. That puts Blank in some exclusive company. And, with that 50-year gap, we aren't too worried about the sky falling on us anytime soon. [From: The Telegraph]
The 5 Greatest Planet-Exploring Robots
If its mission succeeds in 2012, NASA's latest Mars rover, the newly christened Curiosity will join an elite group of robots that have managed to touch down safely on an alien world. Click through to see Curiosity's five greatest forbearers.
Luna 9
Two and a half years before Neil Armstrong's giant leap, the Soviets' unmanned Luna 9 probe touched down on the surface of the Moon on February 3, 1966. For three days, it beamed back the first videos and panoramic photos from a heavenly body.
Venera 7
On August 17, 1970, the Soviet Venera 7 probe crash-landed on Venus and became the first spacecraft to survey our nearest planetary neighbor. What it found wasn't pretty: A hellish world with metal-melting temperatures of 475 degrees Fahrenheit and crushing atmospheric pressure 93 times greater than Earth's.
Viking 1 and 2
After three attempts by the USSR, NASA succeeded in landing the first robot on Mars when Viking 1 touched down on July 20, 1976. (Its sibling, Viking 2, landed on September 3.) Although designed for a 90-day mission, the landers spent over 6 years surveying the planet.
NEAR Shoemaker
On February 14 , 2000, Shoemaker locked into orbit around 433 Eros, an asteroid orbiting just past Mars. Though Shoemaker wasn't designed to land on Eros, NASA engineers successfully plunked it down on the rock after its one-year mission.
Huygens Saturn Probe
A joint American-European mission touched-down a probe called Huygens on the surface of Saturn's largest moon, Titan, on January 14, 2005. Nearly half the size of Earth, Titan is the only moon in the solar system with an atmosphere -- which allowed Huygens to make a leisurely two-and-a-half-hour parachute descent while measuring the atmosphere and snapping photos of the terrain. It continued to send back data for an hour and ten minutes after it landed.





Disney World Scammers Scored Four Years of Free Vacations
Stranger's Kiss Keeps 16-Year-Old From Committing Suicide
Rookie Cop Reportedly Berated, Called 'A Rat' For Arresting Off-Duty Officer
Walmart Ending Membership in Conservative Group
How I Went Bankrupt at 23
Can a New Guy Save Best Buy?
Woman Claims Kangaroo Stalked Her for 2 Days, Then Attacked
Pete Cosey Dead: Chicago Guitar Great and Miles Davis Collaborator Dies at 68
Facebook, Week Two: Fortunes Made and Fortunes Lost (Mostly Lost)
Michael Grant Dead: Crescent Shield Singer Dies Aged 39














Comments
53
Subscribe to commentsJUDYJun 16th 2009 2:32AM
My mother was born in 1909 and in her early childhood (8 or 9) she was running along the railroad tracks on a moonlit night with her many brothers and sisters when a fiery object fell from the sky and hit the railroad up ahead of them and skimmmed along the surface of the rail. When the children reached the object it looked like a rock and was warm to the touch. My mother believed that it was a meteroite and was the size of a mans fist. That was one of her stories that she told to me when I was a child.
stan huntJun 16th 2009 2:37AM
does he have craters?
HeatherJun 16th 2009 2:56AM
30,000 mph? He shouldn't have a hand! This story sounds fishy to me....
mitchJun 16th 2009 3:48AM
oh crap the doomsday libtards are going to be all over this
futhark25Jun 16th 2009 4:57AM
Joe Willie, you are a moron.
First, installing a fire extinguisher does not make you an expert of anything pertaining to cosmology or astronomy.
Secondly, you wouldn't work for NASA because the shuttle is actually called an orbiter and is made by Rockwell/Boeing.
Third, you would be repairing one of the shuttles since only six were built and of those only three are still in use. That would be Discovery, Atlantis or Endeavor.
Fourth, all repairs to the shuttles are done at The Kennedy Space Center on Cape Canaveral, which on the opposite side of Florida from Orlando.
NotbuyingitJun 16th 2009 5:30AM
It is far from impossible that this kid was actually hit. Cool blurb of a story.
Joe Willie may work for NASA but he is no expert on astronomy or space travel for that matter.
For one, NASA doesn't build the shuttles which are actually called Space Transportation Systems, Joe. The orbiter is built by Rockwell/Boeing. The external tank is built by Lockheed Martin and the solid rocket boosters are built by Thiokol/ Alliant Systems.
Second, the orbiters are refurbished at Kennedy Space Center which is on the opposite side of Florida from Orlando. They don't build new orbiters and only six were made. Only three are used today: Discovery, Endeavor and Atlantis.
Now Joe, if you do work for NASA, installing fire suppression systems then that means you install fire extinguishers which doesn't exactly require a bachelor's degree. I don't think a grade school class would find that very interesting.
Never the less Joe, thank you for keeping the NASA office staff safe from fire.
ice_angel1300Jun 16th 2009 5:34AM
wow. I wont even try to analyze any hidden meanings with this one.
al schraderJun 16th 2009 6:03AM
The authorities are not experts on this, I am. Meteorites are made from dark matter. They form when clumps of dark matter combine from gravitational & light energy forces into bigger clumps. Sometimes these "clumps" are miles in size, but mostly not much bigger than a motor home. Is very likely this one was from a large clump that broke-up in space. Expect more from this, but because the earth constantly rotates, could fall anywhere on the planet. Al
bojajpunkJun 16th 2009 9:13AM
Can't we just assume it grazed his hand and not hit him. Can't we all just get along!
Rice HaterJun 17th 2009 12:14AM
Deano sang it also. I have a Dean Martin LP where he sings other people's hit songs.
Rice HaterJun 17th 2009 12:16AM
bojajpunk said 9:13AM on 6-16-2009
Can't we just assume it grazed his hand and not hit him. Can't we all just get along!
...................................................................................................................................................................NO!
jasonJun 18th 2009 11:51PM
lol nice ta ta and tav
aceacot04Jun 21st 2009 10:05PM
why some people believed in fairy tale? super power from outer space rocks? duh!!! hey NASA boy, don 't fool us around ok, try to hit your self by a falling coin from 20th floor building, and tell us how its crater hurt your brainless head.