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Peruvians get sick from apparent meteorite crater

Issue 288
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NATO US Navy Commander Speaks Exclusively To S/land Times

Clan militias in Las Anod fight For The Town

Somaliland School Examination Results Announced

Somaliland accuses Puntland of supporting Ethiopia rebels

The Delayed Release of Imprisoned QARAN Leaders: Procedural Hurdles?

New UN envoy on first Somalia trip

Somaliland official says al Qaeda suspects arrested

U.S. Special Envoy Cites Widespread ‘Lack of Confidence’ in Somali Government

Four killed in Mogadishu violence as free press strangled

Saudis 'support Arab-African Somali troop plan'

A Confusing Mix Of Conflict In Somalia

The Next Battlefront

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Democratic governments urged to summon Eritrean ambassadors on anniversary of 18 September 2001 crackdown

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Life Saving AIDS Drug for Africa Gets Final Clearance

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Somaliland And Puntland In War, As Moderate Leader Rises In Somali South

Position Paper: Going to War and The War in Iraq

UNICEF Urges End to Female Genital Mutilation in Egypt

The New Military Frontier: Africa

Peruvians get sick from apparent meteorite crater

Africa: Investment in livestock sought

When our friends start dying

Food for thought

Opinions

Is This The End Of The Road For Sillanyo?

Crying Wolf: TFG And Puntland Desperately Play The Terrorist Card

Where Is The Beef?

Declaration: Jihadist Youth Movement Boycotting The Mixed Islamist-Secularist Conference (Asmara)

The Disadvantaged People Suffer In Silence

Comment

Calling All Somaliland/UK Scholars 1969-71

RAMADAN KARIM 1-2


By Teresa Cespedes

LIMA, Sep 18, 2007 - Dozens of people living in a Peruvian town near Lake Titicaca reported vomiting and headaches after they went to look at a crater apparently left by a meteorite that crashed down over the weekend, health officials said on Tuesday.

After hearing a loud noise, people went to see what had happened and found a crater 65 feet wide and 22 feet deep on an uninhabited plateau near Carancas in the Puno region.

Experts from Peru's Geophysical Institute are on their way to the area 800 miles south of Lima to verify whether it was a meteorite.

"We've examined about 100 people who got near to the meteorite crater who have vomiting and headaches because of gasses coming out of there," Jorge Lopez, health director in Puno, told Reuters.

"People are scared," he said.

Lopez said people went to the site after hearing a crash that they thought might be an airplane.

"We ourselves went near the crater and now we've got irritated throats and itching noses," Lopez said.

The site is near the border with Bolivia and experts from San Andres university in La Paz said initial analyses of sand samples from the crater showed that it could be a meteorite, according to newspaper reports.

Luisa Macedo, a geologist with the Mining Geology and Metallurgy Institute in Lima, told Reuters the reaction between the elements in a meteorite and the Earth's surface can generate gases that then dissipate.

Meteorites fell in 2002 and 2004 in the Andean area of Arequipa in southern Peru, Hernando Tavera, head of the Peruvian Geophysical Institute, told Reuters.

(Additional reporting by Carlos Alberto Quiroga in La Paz )

Source: Reuters

 


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