(meteorobs) Fw: Possible meteorite

Robert Lunsford lunro.imo.usa at cox.net
Mon May 2 14:05:24 EDT 2005


Here is an interesting note sent to the American Meteor Society. I could 
have dismissed this story outright but I felt others had the right to 
express their views. I'll share any of your comments with Linda.

Thanks!

Bob

----- Original Message ----- 
Subject: Possible meteorite


I am not sure if what I witnessed was a meteorite or something else. 
Perhaps your insight and knowledge of meteorites will help answer my 
question.

In 1952, when I was 8 years old, my family lived in a house on a hill 
overlooking Townline Lake in Lakeview, Michigan.  I was sitting on the 
screened porch when I heard a loud splash.  When I looked up, I saw a large 
round area of the lake boiling.  I was frozen with fascination.  The boiling 
area looked to be perfectly round.  It was approximately 50-75 yards from 
shore ( it's hard to judge distance across the water) and the round boiling 
area was approximately 30-40 feet wide.  The boiling circle drifted to the 
left about 20-30 feet from where it had begun as if something was drifting 
down to the bottom of the lake at an angle.  After watching it for several 
minutes, the boiling slowly stopped.  After the boiling had stopped, I ran 
to tell my mother about it.  Of course she didn't see anything since the 
boiling had already stopped, but I think she did believe me since I was not 
one to make things up.

Would a meteorite cause water to boil like that if it fell into a lake? 
Would it have cooled off enough to stop the water from boiling in only a few 
minutes?  Would a meteorite cause the water to boil in a perfectly round 
pattern?  Could a meteorite hitting earth be that large and not cause any 
destruction if it fell into a lake?  I have always wondered what it might 
have been, and now, 52 years later, I remember the incident like it was only 
yesterday and am still perplexed by the incident.

Any information you might be able to shed on the subject would be greatly 
appreciated.

Thank you for your time.

Linda Johnstone




More information about the Meteorobs mailing list