>>10032532Tunguska was the result an ayy battle between some groups of space niggers in a turf war which ended terribly for the rather large ship that self-destructed in the air before crashing.
>original link memoryholedhttp://web.archive.org/web/20181231102313/https://cecelia.physics.indiana.edu/life/meteorite/tunguska.html> But later the publicaton of a catalog of eyewitness accounts made analysis of the whole event possible. (Vasilyev, N.V. et al., 1981) Two fundamental facts were established:>1. "Images" of the bolide observed in the area of the Angara Rriver and observed in the area of the Nizhnyaya Tunguska River are quite different, and the evidence seems to indicate that they belong to different objects (Demin, D.V. et al., 1984). >belong to different objects>...>Thus, we may tentatively conclude that along with a great energy release from 5 to 5.8 km above the earth, there were a number of low-altitude (maybe even right above the surface) explosions that contributed to the total picture of destruction (Kulik, L.A., 1939; Golenetsky, S.P. a. Stepanok, V.V., 1984).>...>4. Increased concentration of microspherules enriched with copper, zinc, gold, and some other volatile and chalcophile elements is found in the 1908 layers of peat and wood resin at a number of locations in the region (Longo, G. et al., 1994; Kolesnikov, E.M. et al., 1977) .>6. A number of local geochemical anomalies were discovered at the Tunguska site, although their association with the TCB requires further investigation. This is, first of all, the rare earth (primarily ytterbium) anomaly. Concentration of that element in soil, as well as in the 1908 peat layers, is abnormally high (Zhuravlev, V.K., 1976; Levchnko M.A., Terentiiva A.S., 1976).>witness accounts>http://www.phenomena.org.uk/features/page88/page88.htmlKezhma, Siberia.
>pic mostly unrelated