The times before the First World War. In the early morning [of the local time] 800 kilometers from Lake Baikal, on June 30, 1908, on the Podkamennaya Tunguska River, in the uninhabited swampy terrain of the taiga, inaccessible to the human part of Siberia, one of the most incredible explosions on Earth has been taken place. And that's clear, meteorites hitting the ground are quite common, but the explosions audible within 1000km from the epicenter, and knocking down trees within a radius of 40km is already amazing. From the night of June 30 and July 1, the phenomenon of the white night was observed as a result of light reflection by dust during the summer solstice, almost all over Europe. In other words, the appearance of a large amount of dust ejected by the explosion over the Podkamennaya Tunguska River - possibly caused by a meteorite, but possibly also by another phenomenon - in the upper atmosphere caused the white night. Seismographic stations around the world recorded a powerful impact but were recognized as a local earthquake, typical for a seismograph phenomenon, although unusual, felt almost all over the Earth. Also allegedly Russian magnetometers in the regions of Siberia showed the second North Pole. The magnetic storm lasted at best for the next four hours The incident was reported in the Irkutsk newspapers, and the main conclusions were given as the meteorite impact hypothesis, though it amusing that the incident was not discussed by anyone in the world because no one knew about it. Even more fun is the fact that the white night phenomenon, as well as the strange impact, and the seismograph readings were only brought together only 20 years after this event to realize that all these events related to one specific event. The Tunguska Event.
Weird Boom-Boom Thing :c
Along with the interest of the newspapers, there were also witnesses of the phenomenon, obviously largely false, who counted on recognition, fame, and attention, or fell victim to the paranoia of the possibility of experiencing such a phenomenon near their local areas. All these testimonies acted as a catalyst for Leonid Kulik, a contemporary Estonian and then Russian mineralogist. As a meteorite enthusiast, he organized an expedition to explain the hypothetical collapse in the center of the taiga. This expedition, in turn, caught the attention of other Russian scholars, who began to investigate the matter for themselves, like journalists. The events of the Tunguska disaster have been confirmed by isolated peoples living in Tunguska Siberia, the Evenks. They can in some way be considered a kind of Siberian Indians. According to the article by J.M. Suslov, who collected reports in 1926 and which appear a year later in an article - Evenks believe that the explosion concerned meteorites that allegedly fell in the region of the Czamba River, which connects with the Podkamennaya Tunguska. Suslov created a presumed map of the Tunguska catastrophe as well as the possibility of a meteorite fall. Kulik began the expedition in early February 1927 until in May he did not get to the supposed epicenter of the catastrophe. However, both the crater and the meteorite were missing, which may seem unpleasant, because within 18 years of the event, in the swampy forest area of Tunguska, the meteorite may have been absorbed to some extent by the swamps. The more so as event took place in summer when peat bogs can become active. The trees all around were felled and uprooted. At the center of the fallen tears, considered the epicenter of the blast, the trees stood upright but dead, devoid of branches and stripped of their bark, and tanned. On the other hand, ponds from ten to fifty meters in diameter were found in several places during the crash. It is possible that these ponds were a remnant of dissolved meteorites in the atmosphere, the fragments of which stuck into the ground, and the craters were flooded with water by the rains. The lack of food and equipment for further expedition made the operation with the possibility of water draining impossible. In April 1928, Kulik set off on a second expedition, which lasted until the fall of that year. At the end of November, the London Times finally recognized him as one of the first major European journalists about the Tunguska disaster. The New York Times on December 2nd reported: "As we learn, Russian geologist Professor Leonid Kulik is now returning to Leningrad from the depths of northeastern Siberia, where he was found two months ago by a rescue expedition, although it was assumed that he was already dead."
Grandpa Kulik and his extraordinary adventures
Less than a year later, with another group of enthusiasts and also other scientists, Kulik set off on a third expedition, hoping that any craters would give a sign and a clue for finding the meteorite. Like the second trip, to no avail. Despite draining the water, drilling, and searching the area, nothing that could be related to the meteor was found. Investors who invested money in expeditions also lost their enthusiasm, which ruined further work for a considerable number of years. The more so because Kulik, who focused on the study of minerals, volunteered shortly after the war broke out, was taken prisoner by Nazis and, imprisoned in a POW camp, died of typhus in 1942 at the age of fifty-eight (Long live the expeditors....or something...). Post-war studies of independent or/and more dependent institutions from the 1960s led to the hypothesis that the perpetrators of the catastrophe were pieces of a comet, asteroid, or meteoroid. It was also taken into account that a separate piece of plasma, a plasmoid, made its way into the Earth's atmosphere and exploded. In any case, a UFO was considered, not as a spaceship, but as a ship of an unidentified object, therefore quite a wide range of celestial bodies. Supposedly, the Tunguska meteor was to be 65 meters in diameter, and the one in Chelyabinsk was 20. The main reason could well be ... a volcano, which seems likely in the such unexplored territory as Siberia. Especially that modern maps of Siberia are also incomplete in some places and who knows how many more lakes or possibly geysers there are. Love U Sibi ;3 However, the most likely one here seems to be a powerful electrostatic or plasma discharge, of which there would be no trace of it except for waste dust, burned, and fallen vegetation. Interestingly, in 2007, two scientists from the University of Bologna decided that Lake Cheko, discovered in the 1960s, was 300 meters wide and 500 meters long, with a maximum depth of 50 meters. The data of scientists coincide with the direction of the breakdown of trees. The lake is 8 km north of the designated epicenter. There are as many possibilities for excluding this lake is important in this matter as for not excluding it. The lake existed before the disaster, it was discovered after the event, but there are many arguments in it that it is possible that if some fragment of a hypothetical meteorite fell, it could There are as many possibilities for excluding that this lake is important in this matter as for excluding it. The lake existed before the disaster, it was discovered after the event, but there are many arguments in it that it is possible that if some fragment of a hypothetical meteorite fell, it could be there.
Cake CCheco and there is no cocoa or cocaine in there. Or is it?
Maybe some nice fish who looking for friends.
As the case of the Chelyabinsk meteor in 2013 shows, the events of such explosions and falls occur on average once every hundred years. The case of the Chelyabinsk meteor sheds a lot of daylight here, because thanks to this, the meteorite hypothesis seems to be really more credible. Tunguska could have up to 50 megatons, almost as much as he believes the tsar bomb had. Chelyabinsk hovered around 30 megatons. The bomb dropped on Hiroshima was 15 megatons. However, these are estimates, so not fully accurate, so keep that in mind.
(Pls don't blame me, there is too much info about these things and no article wants to explain what the hell happened xd) (Too many things to research, too many). What is certain and uncertain must be said straightforwardly - if the explosion that took place in Tunguska Siberia, had happened in Moscow, Warsaw, or anywhere else, the city and its vicinity would be razed to the ground. The light is also given by the fact that Nikola Tesla could in some way be behind a possible catastrophe, whose person can walk myths, fictions, and secrets alike. It does not change the fact that he had both a laboratory, the ambition to give free electricity to Earth, and a project that focused on transferring electrostatic charge anywhere on Earth. Such reports are in line with his diary notes, and the fact that he thought about it intensely in the spring and summer of 1908 and also considered sending such energy somewhere to the North Pole or some other unpopulated area like Siberia. Coincidentally, his laboratory and the crash site appear to be on the same geographical meridian. Tesla officially withdrew from the project, although an explosion occurs less than later, and a few days later Tesla notes the alleged damage that the beam could have caused. With time, he withdraws from the project, feeling that such a project would be a gigantic threat to life, like an atomic bomb. It is supposed that it would be able to produce 1 terawatt. Whatever you think about it, is it a coincidence that the explosion happened while Tesla was working or not? It's hard to find unambiguous sources of information. Perhaps this is all pure coincidence, although the articles show that Nikola Tesla was showing that he was working on something. It is possible that he got carried away, considering that his ego gained a lot of cynical momentum with age, but it cannot be ruled out that he had the possibility of transferring the electrostatic ball. Come on, it is quite a miracle that he did not burn himself while working on electricity. "It is a very mortal thing to hold so hard the power like this." That's what she said.
The square of green cold Forrest represents the fantastic phenomenon of the event that has been taken long ago and this big grey-brown hole is the hole in your heart 'cuz you really don't know what is the final answer. Rabarbar maybe.
So whatever the solution to the cause of the Tunguska Event is, and if any, I personally oscillate between the extremely strong electrostatic discharge and between the Nikola Tesla project. Although all this is still a matter of guesswork. Let me know your hypothesis in the comment, this topic was so exhausting that I had to spend a lot of time on it. Anyway, I hope that you enjoy reading this article. 112 years of back to the past to this event are enough.
Here is your cookie:
He's dancing,
He's watching you,
He will kill you on the moon.
Or maybe not,
I don't know
'Cuz I watch the variety show.
Yeaaaa
PS
Sorry I didn't write for so long. I was working from January to the end of May and I needed to chill. That's why I bring you a cookie :3 Hope that I publish a new article as soon as I wanted and as it as possible. Tunguska's case was so long that I collecting info and researching it since June. Anyway, 112 years back in the past is so nice. Tunguska in our hearts.
Loves,
Sigma.
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