RT makes light.
For some more background on Chelyabinsk, unmentioned by RT, part from being the site of a meteorite, Chelyabinsk was the site of a major, 1957 Apart from being the site of a meteorite, Chelyabinsk was the site of a major, 1957 nuclear acccident.
For some more background on Chelyabinsk, unmentioned by RT, part from being the site of a meteorite, Chelyabinsk was the site of a major, 1957 Apart from being the site of a meteorite, Chelyabinsk was the site of a major, 1957 nuclear acccident.
The installation,
Chelyabins-40 has been named as the most contamined place on the planet (prior to Chernobyl and Fukushima, I presume.
Chelyabinsk
mystery zone: Blue snow, three Suns, meteorite explosion (VIDEOS)
From
a giant meteorite unexpectedly falling from the sky to a three Suns
optical illusion - the Russian city of Chelyabinsk has become the
world’s premier place for truly out of the blue OMG! moments. RT
gives some insight into the recent madness.
22
February, 2015
For
centuries, Russia’s Chelyabinsk Region, located on the border
between Europe and Asia, has been a defense powerhouse, arming the
Tsars’ forces and establishing the Soviet Union's formidable
nuclear arsenal. But the region’s rep for military muscle is not
what’s been turning heads as of late.
No,
when it comes to packing in as many ‘oh my God! Did you see that?’
moments into one place, Chelyabinsk is the undisputed champ.
The
Meteorite…
In 2013 a meteorite swan dived over the city. And not just any meteor. No, it was the largest piece of flaming space rock to hit the earth in more than a hundred years.
On
February 15 the skies were illuminated by a flying object that
exploded a few times, just enough to make the city’s gritty
residents turn their heads.
“At
first I saw a huge bright fire up in the skies, and then came a loud
explosion that not only shattered the windows, but blew out the
window frames,” resident Taisiya Alabuzhina told RT.
Luckily
the explosion occurred about 30 to 40km over Chelyabinsk and the
space body itself didn’t make an unwelcome crash landing smack dab
in the middle of the city. There were no casualties, but about 1,600
people received minor injuries, mostly from fragments of shattered
glass.
Although
the meteor was relatively small, some believed its blast was
comparable to the power of a nuclear bomb. NASA said the shockwave
force was equal to a 500-kiloton explosion – 30 times the Hiroshima
blast. The shockwave was so powerful that it traveled some 85,000km,
circling the globe twice over the course of three days
Superman-style.
…and
Church of The Meteorite
The
biggest fragment of the meteorite weighed in at around 570 kilograms
and was found in Lake Chebarkul, 90 km from Chelyabinsk. The chunk of
the cosmic body even got its own fan club, with some going as far as
to worship it and establish the so-called ‘Church of the
Meteorite’.
Paranormalist
Andrey Breyvichko, the founder of the circle believes that it
contains “a set of moral and legal norms that will help people live
at a new stage of spiritual knowledge development.” Moreover, he
claims that the meteorite is so powerful it could actually trigger
the Apocalypse.
While
his woo-woo take on the meteorite is…special, it would probably be
fair to say that ‘holy’ was the first word to come out of a lot
of people’s mouths when they first saw that thing hurdling
overhead.
Three
Suns?
And
if a giant meteorite ushering in the apocalypse wasn’t enough for
the residents of Chelyabinsk, in February they got something even
more mind-bending than a double rainbow - a triple sun (that’s one
more than the planet Tatooine!)
So
did Chelyabinsk somehow leave earth and become part of a ternary
solar system? Not exactly. Rather, the triple suntriple sun was
actually an optical illusion which is sometimes called a winter
rainbow; produced by ice crystals in the winter air. The symmetrical
patches of light, tinged with red on the inside, are called mock
suns, parhelia or sundogs. So seriously, forget about double
rainbows, the winter rainbow is where it’s at!
Blue
snow!
You’re
parents always warned you not to eat the yellow snow, but what about
the blue snow? That’s right, if a triple sun wasn’t enough for
the month of February, strange, Smurf-colored snowflakes fell down on
the city’s streets, just in case the residents weren’t already
freaked out enough.
Photo
by Dmitry KudryonokPhoto by Dmitry Kudryonok
But
before anyone could start a cult and herald the blue snow as yet
another sign of the end times, officials figured out that it was
actually caused by a spill at a factory making dye for Easter eggs.
So
what else has been going on in the city as of late? According to the
web, an alarm clock cuts off a girl’s head, a Chupacabra was seen
roaming the streets, a man attacked a bear, and Mickey Mouse,
SpongeBob, and Luntik put a beat down on a driver???
Seriously,
go home Chelyabinsk, you’re drunk!
Here is another report -
Mayak reprocessing plant, Techa river, Chelyabinsk region
Mayak
is Russia's only operational spent nuclear fuel processing plant,
taking spent fuel from Russian VVER-440 reactors, nuclear submarines
as well as fuel imported from Soviet built reactors abroad. Mayak was
the most radioactively contaminated place on earth -- earning Mayak a
place in the Guinness Book of World Records. This video was filmed by
Bellona team visiting the area in 1992.
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