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{"id":4404,"date":"2022-10-06T00:49:08","date_gmt":"2022-10-06T00:49:08","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/namomagazine.com\/?p=4404"},"modified":"2022-11-02T16:12:04","modified_gmt":"2022-11-02T16:12:04","slug":"the-loudest-bang-in-human-history","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/namomagazine.com\/the-loudest-bang-in-human-history\/","title":{"rendered":"THE LOUDEST BANG IN HUMAN HISTORY"},"content":{"rendered":"\r\n
What caused that monstrous explosion over Siberia?<\/strong><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
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On the 30th<\/sup>\u00a0June 1908 at around 7:17 a. m. local time the sky above the Siberian\u00a0taiga\u00a0<\/em>(coniferous forests) in central Russia was split by what sounded like tremendous gunfire. The inhabitants in this sparsely populated region sighted a huge fireball hurtling across the early morning sky and emitting a light more dazzling than that of the sun. A deafening noise could be heard and the resulting shock waves flattened over 80 million trees that littered the ground like toothpicks, setting the forest alight. Although it has been generally conjectured that an asteroid, a meteorite or a comet, piercing the earth\u2019s atmosphere, may have exploded, the scientists, even after more than 100 years, are still at odds with each other, over what really triggered the approximately 30 megaton blast that affected an area in extent of 2150 km\u00b2. Some Russian scholars have even attributed the incident to a spacecraft from a distant planet that crashed over this region.<\/strong><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
Caravans winding through the Gobi Desert halted and looked in awe at a fireball skimming across the sky and disappearing over the border of Mongolia. Then the desolate marshy region of peat-bogs and pine forests in Central Siberia, near the Stony Tunguska River, trembled under the impact of a cataclysmic explosion when the descending object struck the ground, leaving a gigantic and blinding \u201cpillar of fire\u201d that flared up into the clear blue sky, casting a red glow over the landscape and visible above the horizon to stunned Siberians in far-off towns, accompanied by dark masses of thick clouds billowing to an altitude of over 20 km. The entire area was showered by an ominous \u201cblack rain\u201d and intermittent thunderclaps, resembling heavy artillery, reverberated throughout central Russia.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
Powerful ballistic waves resulting from the enormous explosion knocked over trees, blowing down the semi-nomads\u2019 huts of the terrified indigenous Evenk people of this remote and deserted area, who were scattered like specks of dust. The noise was so great that some herdsmen closer to the blast were deafened and others were thrown into a state of dazed shock that rendered them speechless. Three Evenk were killed and many of them, some 500 km away, were injured. About 1500 reindeer were wiped out as well while the frightened passengers aboard the Trans-Siberian Express, near the station town of Kansk, to the south, were almost jolted out of their seats. As the train was jarred and shook wildly on its newly completed tracks, the startled engine-driver quickly brought the train to a screeching halt. The huge shock waves encircled the world twice and were recorded on barographs in London. They were detected in Germany, Denmark and Croatia and as far away as Java in Indonesia and Washington. For three successive nights, people in London and Paris were able to read their newspapers without the aid of any artificial light while in Moscow it was even possible to take photos at night without the aid of flashbulbs. In some places, the resulting shock waves were equivalent to an earthquake measuring 5.0 on the Richter scale.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
The nearest settlement was Vanavara, founded in 1932 as a trading post for hunters, trappers and fishermen, some 65 km away from the blast which scorched the tall conifers and ignited fires that would continue to burn for days. The hurricane that arose above the\u00a0taiga\u00a0<\/em>tore roofs from houses and shattered windows. These huge shock waves flooded the banks of the Angara River, formerly known as the Upper Tunguska.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
The survivors gave oral accounts of the devastation that were transcribed into Russian. These eye-witness accounts graphically narrated an atomic explosion 1500 times more powerful than the bomb over Hiroshima in Japan in August 1945. Later, a 1969 Russian study disclosed that the genetic structure of the remaining trees had been strikingly altered, possibly due to radioactivity, when it turned out that larches and birches aged between 40 and 50 years (which had therefore germinated after the explosion), which should normally have been 7-8 m high, were in fact 17-22 m in height.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
Kulik\u2019s theory of a meteorite<\/strong><\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
The Siberian forests, too, are as impenetrable, as desolate, hostile and inaccessible as the tropical wilderness in Africa or South America. Until the 1917 Revolution of the Bolsheviks, led by Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (1870-1924), that toppled the Tsarist regime of the last Russian Emperor Nicholas II, leading to the establishment of the Soviet Union (1922-1991), fewer Europeans had ventured to enter them than had gone into the southern jungles. The Evenk people of the region were extremely primitive and superstitious and they were afraid of the place where Ogdy, god of fire and thunder, had come down from heaven to earth to destroy by fire all those who ventured there. After the blast, the villagers dashed out into the streets in absolute panic; some wept in terror, convinced that the end of the world had come.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
Russian mineralogist Leonid Alekseyevich Kulik (1883-1942), though self-taught and with no proper academic training, was inspired by the event, grasping the fact that the Tunguska affair was scientifically very important. In the spring of 1928 Kulik, after having hacked his way through the immeasurable fallen forest, reached the epicentre of the explosion: an open spot ringed with trees lying on the ground, all with their roots pointing in the same direction. He concluded that the awe-inspiring destruction was caused by a huge meteorite. Nevertheless, he did not come across any fragments of such a meteorite and neither did he succeed in finding the crater which must have been made. Vasili Sytin, one of his colleagues, formulated the most absurd of the 77 theories: that a very violent wind was the cause of the disaster, but Kulik adamantly clung to his belief that it must have been a meteorite. Finally, he assumed that fragments of the supposed meteorite would be found underneath 25 metres of frozen ground and marsh water must have filled the crater, but half a century later, it was clearly shown that the impassable swamp in the epicentre was a normal\u00a0taiga<\/em>\u00a0formation.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n
Prof. Vasiliy Grigorievich Fesenkov (1889-1972), the eminent Russian astrophysicist, admitted that the Tunguska catastrophe was not caused by a meteorite. The disturbance of such severity could not have been brought about by meteorites and the light phenomena that lasted three nights in succession in 1908 could not be due to any cloud of particles of a terrestrial origin.<\/p>\r\n\r\n\r\n\r\n