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Post Info TOPIC: Vitim Event, Cando Event, Vela Event, Eastern Mediterranean Event


L

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Cando Event
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The Cando event was an explosion that occurred in the village of Cando, Spain, in the morning of January 18, 1994. There were no casualties in this incident, which has been described as being like a small Tunguska event.
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L

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RE: Vitim Event, Cando Event, Vela Event, Eastern Mediterranean Event
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The timings and paths of these impactors unfortunately show that they do not share a common orbital path.


To working out if there is a common orbital link with the explosions, the dates, and impact directions need to be plotted out.

A close impact grouping (over a few day) at a certain date (or separated by 6 months), with those impactors sharing a common impact direction (ie north to south etc), and perhaps importantly, occurring at a time of an annual meteor shower, would raise suspicions and warrant further investigation.


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Anonymous

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Sorry, not sure where this annotation went, I'm ne to this..

They're not asteroids. They appear to lose all proper motion upon creation at the souce,  appear in the same position relative to the sun but in a different year. Strangely, on the same date..... Earth collided with them on the precession intersection points

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Anonymous

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Sorry, forgot to add, they're not asteroids. They don't have an orbital path as they appear to lose all proper motion upon creation and appear to just sit on the same orbit position in relation to the sun, but at a different time, until Earth in a previous orbit collides with them. I know, this sounds radical or even whacky, but please try the simulations for the times in question. I've run them over and over again.
Tom

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The common position of Earth in relation to the Sun at the time of the impact intersects with the position of Earth in relation to the Sun on dates between Sep 9 2009 and September 2010. The impact time is at the point of such orbital intersection. The objects themselves were created on various dates between 9 Sep 2009 and September 2010 on Earth... The location of the source, as verified in orbit simulations, is Geneva. Some events show a more obvious connection, e.g. the Eastern Mediterranean Event. Oribit simulation shows the locations Geneva and Tripoli for example showing an axis correlating to the movement of Earth at the time of the explosion (the event commenced over Libya). Another good one to look at in orbit simulation is the Vitim Event, where Geneva relates to the town of Chita in Siberia the same way. The Vitim River is  a few 100 km north east of Chita, the software I used for the simulation only lets you flag Chita as a location however. I'd be happy to upload screenshots from the simulations if you'd like to see them.



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L

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Ed ~ i plotted a few of the orbits of the impactors, and unfortunately they do not share a common orbital path.

It should also be mentioned that on average a 5-10 metre asteroid explodes in the Earths atmosphere every year (producing a 15 kilotonne explosion). Tunguska type explosion perhaps occur every 100 years.
So it may be worth further investigations of similar impacts.

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L

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The Vela Incident (sometimes referred to as the South Atlantic Flash) was an unidentified "double flash" of light that was detected by an American Vela Hotel satellite on September 22, 1979.
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The Cando event was an explosion that occurred in the village of Cando, Spain, in the morning of January 18, 1994. There were no casualties in this incident, which has been described as being like a small Tunguska event.
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The Eastern Mediterranean Event was a high-energy aerial explosion over the Mediterranean Sea, around 34°N 21°E (between Libya and Crete, Greece) on June 6, 2002.
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The Vitim event or Bodaybo event is believed to be an impact by a bolide or comet nucleus in the Vitim River basin. It occurred near the town of Bodaybo in the Mamsko-Chuisky district of Irkutsk Oblast, Siberia, Russia on September 25, 2002 at approximately 10:00 p.m. (local time).
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Anonymous

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I guess I won't exactly be flooded with emails requesting the doc from response so far, so, if anyone is interested, would you please email me at otrropie@gmail.com and I'll try and send you a copy (unless there are thousands of requests...)
Tom

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New

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oh, sorry, the latest calculation for the one in February isn't yet included on this basic diagram, but now all seven explosions coincide exactly with precession intersection points. That is not a coincidence. My PDF doc explains how and why. If anyone could help me make it accessible, please let me know, upload here or otherwise. Oh yeah, I try to explain precession intersection points and their significance too

PS I guess I won't exactly be flooded with requests for this doc, so, if there is anyone who is interested, please email me at otrropie@gmail.com and I'd be happy to send you the file (unless there are thousands of requests...)

-- Edited by otrropie on Thursday 1st of July 2010 11:52:31 PM

-- Edited by otrropie on Friday 2nd of July 2010 12:11:11 AM

-- Edited by otrropie on Friday 2nd of July 2010 12:28:04 AM

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I have devised a means of calculating a common source for these and so far three other similar events. I'll try and upload a PDF doc with the full explanation but maybe there's a limit to the size here, if it doesn't work, could the administrator please advise how I might be able to make this available to you?
Tom

P.S. This may be quite upsetting, but it is easily verifiable. I had targetted the text to non-astronomers, so please forgive me for some of the simplicity.

PPS OK, I just tried it, so images don't work... any ideas???

OK, plan B. I'll attach the first diagram only. All events occurred on Apsidal Precession Intersection points. I'm hoping astronomers will have some interest in this, nobody else so far can understand it...

-- Edited by otrropie on Thursday 1st of July 2010 11:17:08 PM

-- Edited by otrropie on Friday 2nd of July 2010 12:13:29 AM

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