Chicora Meteor

I will archive recent major events here while deciding whether to permanently integrate them into the research catalogue.
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Jim Eshelman
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Chicora Meteor

Post by Jim Eshelman » Sat Apr 03, 2021 6:38 pm

June 24, 1938, about 6:0 PM, Chicora, PA
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicora,_ ... ora_Meteor
https://archive.triblive.com/news/penns ... t-in-1938/

"...a meteorite fell in the vicinity of Chicora... the 450-tonne (500-short-ton) meteorite exploded approximately 12 miles above the Earth's surface. Only two fragments of the meteorite were found following initial investigations. They had masses of 8.5 oz and 2.2 oz, and were discovered some miles short of the calculated point of impact of the main mass – which is yet to be found. Two more small fragments were found nearby in 1940.

"Numerous reports of the Chicora Meteor mention that a cow was struck and injured by a falling stone; other accounts say that the cow was killed by the stone... The sound and light of the exploding meteor were initially mistaken for an explosion in the powder magazine at West Winfield, and was compared by investigators... as comparable to the Halifax Explosion of 1917 in destructive power. 'If it had landed on Pittsburgh there would have been few survivors,' they stated."

Year: Capsolar {0 to +1}
Sun on Z 0°29'
Saturn & Uranus widely foreground
Moon-Eris sq. 1°05'
Moon-Mercury op. 1°12'
Moon-Saturn sq. 2°03'

Bridge {+2}
(Jupiter is irrelevant to the timing but keeps this from +3.)
t Neptune conj. Cansolar MC 1/27-7/10
t Jupiter sq. Cansolar Asc 5/20-7/16
CanQ Moon conj. s/p Mars 6/15-7/16
t Mars conj. Capsolar IC 6/22-28
Event window: Jun 22-28

Quarter: Arisolar {+2}
(The chart read conventionally tells a fine enough story without PVP aspects, but the 3-dimensional of Sun op. Moon on PV square Mars on horizon, all square Pluto on meridian is explosively on target.)
Mars on Asc 1°02' [sq. non-angular Jupiter 2°05']
Eris on Asc 2°42'
Mercury on EP-a 1°52' [conj. non-angular Sun 2°47' mundo]
Pluto on IC 3°18'
Venus & Uranus more widely foreground
-- Sun-Mars sq. 0°25' PVP
-- Moon-Pluto sq. 0°44' PVP
-- Venus-Uranus conj. 0°52' mundo
-- Uranus-Pluto sq. 0°54' mundo
-- Moon-Sun op. 1°22' PVP
-- Mars-Eris conj. 1°40' mundo
-- Moon-Mars sq. 1°44' PVP
-- Venus-Pluto sq. 1°46' mundo
-- Sun-Pluto sq. 0°31' PVP
Moon-Saturn op. 0°29' mundo
Moon-Sun op. 3°09'

Month: Caplunar (Silent.) Moon-Venus Moon-Pluto.
Week: Arilunar (Silent.)

Week: Liblunar {+2}
Mars on N 0°02' (IC 0°57')
Moon, Saturn, & Neptune more foreground
Moon-Saturn op. 1°02'

Day: Capsolar Quotidian & Transits {+2}
p EP conj. s Neptune 0°52'
--------------------------------
t Mars conj. s IC 0°46'
t Sun conj. s Moon 0°39'

Day: Cansolar Quotidian & Transits {+2}
p Moon conj. s Mars 0°43' [op. t Moon the hour of the impact]
p Asc op. t Uranus 0°12'
-----------------------------
t Neptune conj. s MC 0°17'
t Jupiter sq. s Asc 0°25'


Though we don't need them, the lesser ingresses provide interesting echoes of this very Mars-driven event plus more of the Neptune that these events always show:

Day: Arisolar Quotidian & Transits {+2}
p Moon op. s Sun 0°38'
p EP conj. t Mars 1°35'
-----------------------------
t Pluto op. s MC 1°03'
t Moon conj. s Asc 0°53'

Day: Libsolar Quotidian & Transits {+2}
p MC sq. t Neptune 0°02'
p Asc conj. s Neptune 0°10'
t Sun sq. s Moon 0°56'
[p Moon conj. s Eris 0°11', conj. t Eris 0°56']
-------------------------------
t Neptune sq. s Asc 0°57'
t Mars sq. s MC 0°43'
Jim Eshelman
www.jeshelman.com

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