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Nicaragua asteroid
A Nicaraguan soldier checks the site of a suspected meteorite strike in the capital Managua. Photograph: German Miranda/AFP/Getty Images
A Nicaraguan soldier checks the site of a suspected meteorite strike in the capital Managua. Photograph: German Miranda/AFP/Getty Images

Meteorite 'caused mysterious boom in Nicaragua'

This article is more than 9 years old
Asteroid fragment thought to have caused large crater and loud noise but uncertainty remains as no streak of light seen in sky

Nicaragua's government said that a mysterious boom heard in the capital was made by a small meteorite that left a crater in a wooded area near Managua's airport.

Government spokeswoman Rosario Murillo said on Sunday that a committee formed by the government to study the event determined it was a "relatively small" meteorite that "appears to have come off an asteroid that was passing close to Earth".

Murillo said Nicaragua would ask international experts to help local scientists in understanding what happened.

The crater left by the meteorite has a radius of 12 metres and is 5 metres deep, said Humberto Saballos, a volcanologist with the Nicaraguan Institute of Territorial Studies who was on the committee. He said it was still not clear if the meteorite disintegrated or was buried.

meteor 0909 WEB
meteor 0909 WEB

Humberto Garcia, of the Astronomy Centre at the National Autonomous University of Nicaragua, said the meteorite could be related to an asteroid that was forecast to pass by the planet on Saturday night.

"We have to study it more because it could be ice or rock," he said.

Wilfried Strauch, an adviser to the Institute of Territorial Studies, said it was "very strange that no one reported a streak of light. We have to ask if anyone has a photo or something."

Local residents reported hearing a loud boom on Saturday night, but said they did not see anything strange in the sky.

"I was sitting on my porch and I saw nothing, then all of a sudden I heard a large blast. We thought it was a bomb because we felt an expansive wave," Jorge Santamaria told the Associated Press.

The site of the crater is near Managua's international airport and an air force base. Only journalists from state media were allowed to visit.

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