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Wednesday, December 17, 1997 Published at 18:12 GMT Sci/Tech It came from the skies ![]() Satellite image of the impact. (Courtesy Dundee Satellite Receiving Station)
"I was on the bridge and looking out of the window, I have never seen so strong light before in the night," he said. "In the strongest part of the light, there looked like a circle that was burning."
But no-one was able to photograph it as it glowed for between 2 and 5 seconds. However a closed circuit surveillance camera in a car park in the town of Nuuk did record the incredible brightening of the ambient light.
This would put it on a par with the Tunguska meteorite which devastated hundreds of square miles of Siberia in 1908, when it exploded with the same energy as a 15 megatonne nuclear bomb.
The Danish airforce have sent up planes to look for the impact site. So far they have had little success because of appalling weather conditions.
The search could be extremely hard. The meteorite would have been white hot when it hit the ground.
It would have melted its way into the pack ice, which would have then melted on top of it.
Just to make things more difficult, there was heavy snow in the hours after the impact, further obscuring the site.
"We don't have a radar on the aircraft which can look through the snow," said Captain Als. "So it's pretty much a visual observation."
The meteorite has been named Qaqortoq, after the nearest post office, which is apparantly traditional.
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