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Russian meteor misidentified by most
by Staff Writers
Moscow (UPI) Mar 1, 2013


2.2-pound fragment of Russian meteor. Credit: The Russian Academy of Sciences.

Most of the inhabitants of the Russian city under an exploding meteor failed to identify it for what it was, a poll indicated.

While nearly half the residents in Chelyabinsk, hit by fragments from a falling meteorite Feb. 15, saw the object streak across the early morning sky, most thought it was either a falling aircraft, a military attack or a UFO, a poll by the Public Opinion Foundation, based in Moscow, found.

Forty-seven percent of the population of Chelyabinsk, a city in the Urals with a population of around 1 million, reported they saw the meteorite.

But only 10 percent correctly guessed what they were observing, the poll found.

Forty percent believed it was a falling plane, 8 percent thought it was a rocket launch gone wrong, 6 percent believed it was an explosion of some kind and 5 percent believed the city was under attack by rocket fire, RIA Novosti reported Friday.

Four percent thought it was a UFO.

The poll was carried out by telephone among 500 respondents Feb. 23-24. The margin of error was 4.5 percentage points, the polling foundation said.

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DEEP IMPACT
Origin of Russian meteor identified
Medellin, Colombia (UPI) Feb 26, 2013
Scientists say they have reconstructed the path of the meteor that exploded over Russia Feb. 15 and identified its likely origin within our solar system. Researchers at the Universidad de Antioquia in Colombia said videos of the meteor's fireball path over the city of Chelyabinsk taken with camera phones, CCTV and car-dashboard cameras allowed them to compute its trajectory and from tha ... read more


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