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- Scientists hope to solve the mystery of the greatest
cosmic impact of the century by undertaking an expedition to a remote region
of Russia.
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- The impact happened on 30 June, 1908, at Tunguska in
central Siberia. With no warning, a small comet or meteor hurtling through
space collided with the Earth and exploded in the sky.
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- The impact had a force of 20 million tonnes of TNT, equivalent
to 1,000 Hiroshima bombs. It is estimated that 60 million trees were felled
over an area of 2,200 square kilometres. If the explosion had occurred
over London or Paris, hundreds of thousands of people would have been killed.
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- The first expedition to reach the site was led by Russian
scientist L.A.Kullik in 1938. His team was amazed to find so much devastation
but no obvious crater.
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- So began the mystery of Tunguska: What was the object
that caused such destruction and why did it leave no crater?
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- Lake bottom
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- Even today some dead trees remainIt may have been a small
comet, made of rock and ice, that was fragile enough to be vaporised in
the explosion before it struck the ground. Alternatively it may have been
a low-density meteorite.
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- To search for answers, the second University of Bologna
expedition is about to travel to the isolated region taking with them a
battery of high-tech equipment.
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- One of the team, Dr Luigi Foschini, told BBC News Online
that one of their main aims will be the study of sediments at the bottom
of Lake Ceko.
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- Lake Ceko could hold clues. This lake is 8km (five miles)
away from the centre of the 1908 explosion. The lake is about 500 metres
wide and 47m deep.
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- "We will be using a 'sub bottom penetration system,'
to make a structural map of it to decide where to drill for samples from
the lake bed," he said.
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- At the same time, a "side scan sonar" will
take ultrasound photographs of the lake bottom. A remotely-controlled,
underwater telecamera will also be used in the research.
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- Large fragments
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- Testing the side-scan radarUndisturbed samples will be
collected by using a "box corer." Dr Foschini hopes to collect
microparticles from the disintegration of the cosmic body to determine
once and for all what it was.
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- They will also continue a search for microparticles preserved
in tree resin. This was carried out on the earlier expedition in 1991.
The researchers will also undertake an accurate aerial survey of the region
and compare their data with that obtained in 1938 by Kullik.
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- This microparticle was recovered in 1991The comparison
between the 1938 pictures and the new survey should give further information
on the direction of the trees felled by the explosion.
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- Some scientists believe that large fragments may have
reached the ground before the main impact. If the cosmic body was a meteorite,
then it may be possible to find these fragments.
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- A search will be made for them among the ground rocks
of Tunguska using neodymium magnets together with a metal detector.
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- http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_380000/380060.stm
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