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6.0-magnitude earthquake strikes off Japan’s Chiba prefecture, Felt in Tokyo
A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Japan Saturday evening outside Tokyo, shaking buildings in the capital, but no tsunami warning was issued, the country’s meteorological agency said. The epicenter of the 6.0 magnitude earthquake was in Chiba Prefecture near Tokyo, at a depth of 50 km. The underground
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Hitting near the prefecture might not be a good thing , it's a pretty good sized one thank God it wasn't near FUKUSHIMA.
And then we have a meteor that hit RUssia
Event into space in Russia [Asia] on June 25 2018 03:12 AM (UTC).
More than five years after a large space rock slammed into the atmosphere over Russia, shattering thousands of windows in the city of Chelyabinsk below, another meteor exploded in the sky over the country last week, lighting up the early morning sky. The fireball was captured on camera near the town of Lipetsk, between Moscow and the Ukrainian border. It glows bright for a second, leaving a trail of smoke that lingers for several minutes afterwards. The impact of the meteor with Earth's atmosphere was picked up by US government sensors used to detect nuclear explosions, among other things. NASA estimates the resulting explosion packed a punch of about 2.8 kilotons, which pales compared with the 440 kiloton blast over Chelyabinsk in 2013, but is the most explosive asteroid entry measured so far in 2018. There have been no reports of damage from the blast, but some eyewitnesses reported hearing a loud sonic boom, according to the International Meteor Organization. NASA estimates the meteor was moving at about 32,200 miles per hour (51,800 kilometers per hour) when it exploded about 16.7 miles (27 kilometers) above the surface of the planet. Fireballs are a relatively regular occurrence, often coinciding with meteor showers. The Chelyabinsk fireball from 2013 was by far the most powerful such event recorded in the last 30 years, but an even more powerful impact is thought to have happened in Siberia in 1908. So why always Russia? Actually, fireballs are seen around the world, but since Russia covers about an eighth of the globe's total land mass, it just makes mathematical sense they're more likely to be seen there.
RSOE EDIS - Event into space event in [Lipetsk airspace], Lipetsk Oblast, Russia [Asia] on June 25 2018 03:12 AM
Event into space in India on June 29 2018 04:07 PM (UTC).
Two hot embers fell from the sky at a Kasoli village in the district on Thursday night which villagers claimed to be meteorites. The two stones fell down with a loud sound after rain at the village in Charthawal police station area, Sub-divisional Magistrate Kumar Dharmendra said. The stones had been taken into "safe custody" for investigation and only experts will tell whether they are meteorites, he added.
A 6.0-magnitude earthquake hit Japan Saturday evening outside Tokyo, shaking buildings in the capital, but no tsunami warning was issued, the country’s meteorological agency said. The epicenter of the 6.0 magnitude earthquake was in Chiba Prefecture near Tokyo, at a depth of 50 km. The underground
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Hitting near the prefecture might not be a good thing , it's a pretty good sized one thank God it wasn't near FUKUSHIMA.
And then we have a meteor that hit RUssia
Event into space in Russia [Asia] on June 25 2018 03:12 AM (UTC).
More than five years after a large space rock slammed into the atmosphere over Russia, shattering thousands of windows in the city of Chelyabinsk below, another meteor exploded in the sky over the country last week, lighting up the early morning sky. The fireball was captured on camera near the town of Lipetsk, between Moscow and the Ukrainian border. It glows bright for a second, leaving a trail of smoke that lingers for several minutes afterwards. The impact of the meteor with Earth's atmosphere was picked up by US government sensors used to detect nuclear explosions, among other things. NASA estimates the resulting explosion packed a punch of about 2.8 kilotons, which pales compared with the 440 kiloton blast over Chelyabinsk in 2013, but is the most explosive asteroid entry measured so far in 2018. There have been no reports of damage from the blast, but some eyewitnesses reported hearing a loud sonic boom, according to the International Meteor Organization. NASA estimates the meteor was moving at about 32,200 miles per hour (51,800 kilometers per hour) when it exploded about 16.7 miles (27 kilometers) above the surface of the planet. Fireballs are a relatively regular occurrence, often coinciding with meteor showers. The Chelyabinsk fireball from 2013 was by far the most powerful such event recorded in the last 30 years, but an even more powerful impact is thought to have happened in Siberia in 1908. So why always Russia? Actually, fireballs are seen around the world, but since Russia covers about an eighth of the globe's total land mass, it just makes mathematical sense they're more likely to be seen there.
RSOE EDIS - Event into space event in [Lipetsk airspace], Lipetsk Oblast, Russia [Asia] on June 25 2018 03:12 AM
Event into space in India on June 29 2018 04:07 PM (UTC).
Two hot embers fell from the sky at a Kasoli village in the district on Thursday night which villagers claimed to be meteorites. The two stones fell down with a loud sound after rain at the village in Charthawal police station area, Sub-divisional Magistrate Kumar Dharmendra said. The stones had been taken into "safe custody" for investigation and only experts will tell whether they are meteorites, he added.