The wait is almost over. Kosmogonia Launch Event - July 12th. Comment "LAUNCH" for the link!
He examines the Tunguska event not as a historical curiosity but as a preview of future impacts. The 1908 airburst over Siberia flattened 2,000 square kilometers of old-growth taiga forest, yet remarkably few people were harmed due to the region's remoteness. The forensic evidence left behind is extraordinary: radial blast patterns, scorched trees standing like tombstones at ground zero, and seismic signatures recorded around the world. What makes Tunguska so valuable to researchers is that it occurred in one of the few places on Earth where such an event could leave clear physical evidence while causing minimal human casualties. He points out that this convergence of factors, remote location and pristine preservation, gave science a rare window into what cosmic impacts actually do when they reach the lower atmosphere. The question is not whether another Tunguska-scale event will occur, but where and when. Next time, the odds may not favor an uninhabited forest.