Meteorite Strikes New Jersey Home |
| Written by spacetravel.org | |||
| Sunday, 14 January 2007 19:19 | |||
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Sat Jan 6, 2007 12:37 AM GMT NEW YORK (Reuters) - A metallic rock that smashed through the roof of a home in New Jersey was a meteorite, authorities said on Friday. The small, oblong rock, weighing 13 ounces (377 grams), crashed into a home in Freehold Township, 50 miles south of New York, on Tuesday evening and was embedded in the wall on the top floor of the two-story house. Lt. Robert Brightman, of Freehold Township police, said in a statement that a team of geologists from New Jersey State University Rutgers and an independent metallurgist had examined the object. "The team has determined the meteorite is very metal-rich, and possibly represents the deep interior of an asteroid. Its coloration, markings, density and magnetic properties are characteristic of an iron meteorite," Brightman said.
He said the meteorite would provisionally be named "Freehold Township," pending approval from an international committee. Source: Reuters
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