Posted on 09/19/2009 8:33:19 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Using small asteroids to destroy every last one of our enemies — making it look like an accident of course — seems like the best of all space program spinoffs.
As always, a bunch of people got killed on the Hajj this year. Some years ago a group of Turkish pilgrims got trampled to death by a frightened horde of “worshippers” at the annual cast stones at the dead goat ceremony. They’d set down their suitcases, and when they turned to flee the oncoming crowd, tripped over their own luggage.
I was hopin’ someone would take care of that.
Using smaller rocks against bigger rocks is probably the best approach, given enough lead time.
Could be, but good luck getting anyone to answer the phone at the claims number.
Quite.
OUCH.
Gotta hate it when that happens.
I checked out the link from Emilio Spedicato. It was from an Italian University, written in Italian, but it had nothing to do with astronomical events. Can you find the correct entry, I really would like to read it, even if it is in Italian?
I also tried the “Wabar” link but it is also a bust. In the 1970’s there was a National Geographic article about a contributing author who was taken by some Saudi’s to find and iron meteor in the Rub al Kali (Empty Quarter). They finally located it. It was at least 4 feet in diameter and 2 to 3 feet thick. Much too heavy to take home. It was sitting in a crater type depression around 200 feet in diameter. Local tradition was that it destroyed a sinful city (echos of Soddom and Gommorah).
I am wondering if this was from a more recent strike, but that perhaps the whole Empty Quarter was sterilized several thousand years ago by a strike that left the biblical and local stories of “sin city”. Any info out there?
There wasn’t a strike, as it turned out, which destroyed a “sin city”. During the Middle Ages there was a quake, and the town was heavily undermined with storage cellars, hidey-holes, and that kind of thing. The impacting object they found fell in the last hundred years or so. :’(
A Catastrophical Scenario for Discontinuities in Human History
Journal of New England Antiquities Research Association, 26, 1-14, 1991
1st version published in 1985 as Quaderno 85/3 | Emilio Spedicato - U of Bergamo
Posted on 04/19/2002 12:42:27 PM PDT by vannrox
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/669263/posts
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