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LIMA (AFP) - Villagers in southern Peru were struck by a mysterious illness after a meteorite made a fiery crash to Earth in their area, regional authorities said Monday.

 

Around midday Saturday, villagers were startled by an explosion and a fireball that many were convinced was an airplane crashing near their remote village, located in the high Andes department of Puno in the Desaguadero region, near the border with Bolivia.

 

Residents complained of headaches and vomiting brought on by a "strange odor," local health department official Jorge Lopez told Peruvian radio RPP.

 

Seven policemen who went to check on the reports also became ill and had to be given oxygen before being hospitalized, Lopez said.

 

Rescue teams and experts were dispatched to the scene, where the meteorite left a 100-foot-wide (30-meter-wide) and 20-foot-deep (six-meter-deep) crater, said local official Marco Limache.

 

"Boiling water started coming out of the crater and particles of rock and cinders were found nearby. Residents are very concerned," he said

 

Weird :blink:

 

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Hundreds of people in Peru have needed treatment after an object from space - said to be a meteorite - plummeted to Earth in a remote area, officials say.

They say the object left a deep crater after crashing down over the weekend near the town of Carancas in the Andes.

 

People who visited the scene have been complaining of headaches, vomiting and nausea after inhaling gases.

 

But some experts have questioned whether it was a meteorite or some other object that landed in Carancas.

 

"Increasingly we think that people witnessed a fireball, which are not uncommon, went off to investigate and found a lake of sedimentary deposit, which may be full of smelly, methane rich organic matter," said Dr Caroline Smith, a meteorite expert at the London-based Natural History Museum.

 

"This has been mistaken for a crater."

 

A team of scientists is on its way to the site to collect samples and verify whether it was indeed a meteorite.

 

I think there's also a certain psychological fear in the community

 

Local mayor Nestor Quispe

 

 

Can meteorites make you ill?

 

Geologists have called on the authorities to stop people going near the crash site.

 

A local journalist, Martine Hanlon, told the BBC experts did not believe the meteor would make anybody sick, but they did think a chemical reaction caused by its contact with the ground could release toxins such as sulphur and arsenic.

 

An engineer from the Peruvian Nuclear Energy Institute told AFP news agency that no radiation had been detected from the crater. He ruled out any possibility that the fallen object might be a satellite.

 

Afraid

 

Nestor Quispe, the mayor of the municipality to which Carancas belongs, told the BBC that many residents had been affected.

 

"Lots of people from the town of Carancas have fallen ill. They have headaches, eye problems, irritated skin, nausea and vomiting," he said.

 

"I think there's also a certain psychological fear in the community."

 

Local resident Heber Mamani said a bull and some other animals had become ill.

 

 

 

"That is why we are asking for an analysis, because we are worried for our people. They are afraid," he said.

 

Another local villager, Romulo Quispe, said people were worried that the water was no longer safe to drink.

 

"This is the water we use for the animals, and for us, for everyone, and it looks like it is contaminated," he said.

 

"We don't know what is going on at the moment, that is what we are worried about."

 

The incident took place on Saturday night, when people near Carancas in the remote Puno region, some 1,300km (800 miles) south of the Peruvian capital, Lima, reported seeing a fireball in the sky coming towards them.

 

The object then hit the ground, leaving a 30m (98ft) wide and 6m (20ft) deep crater.

 

The crater spewed what officials described as fetid, noxious gases.

 

Jorge Lopez, a health director in Puno, told Reuters news agency he had an irritated throat and itchy nose after visiting the site.

 

Source: BBC

Think they should give agents Muldur and Scully a call :)

 

 

http://i27.photobucket.com/albums/c170/brian91/250px-X-Files_intro-1.jpg

Watch out for Peruvian Pod People!

 

Oh don't, that'll be the Sun's next headline as soon as the Madeleine story fades.

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