Tunguska Event
The massive 1908 explosion in Siberia that flattened 2,150 square kilometers of forest, widely attributed to a meteor airburst but still generating alternative theories.
INVESTIGATION OVERVIEW
The Tunguska event was a massive explosion that occurred near the Podkamennaya Tunguska River in Siberia on June 30, 1908. The blast, estimated at 10–30 megatons of TNT, flattened approximately 80 million trees over 2,150 square kilometers. Seismic and atmospheric pressure waves were detected as far away as the United Kingdom. Despite the enormous scale, no impact crater was found, and no significant meteorite debris has ever been recovered. The leading scientific explanation is an airburst of a meteoroid or comet. Alternative theories include a mini black hole, antimatter, or extraterrestrial spacecraft.
KEY CLAIMS
No impact crater means the object exploded before hitting the ground — a 10+ megaton airburst
No meteorite fragments have been found despite multiple expeditions
The area's trees were all knocked down radially from a central point
Some eyewitness accounts describe strange light phenomena before the explosion
The explosion was comparable to a nuclear blast, decades before nuclear weapons existed
SUPPORTING EVIDENCE
Seismic and atmospheric records from 1908 document the event worldwide
Expedition findings (Kulik 1927–1930) documented the radial tree-fall pattern
Microscopic analysis found silica spheres and carbon isotopes consistent with cosmic impact
Eyewitness accounts from Siberian nomads describe the fireball and blast
Computer modeling (2019) supports the comet airburst hypothesis
COUNTER ARGUMENTS
The rarity of such events makes them difficult to study; only one similar airburst (Chelyabinsk 2013) has been documented
The absence of meteorite fragments is consistent with a comet (icy body that vaporizes completely) or low-density asteroid
Alternative theories (mirror matter, black hole, alien craft) lack supporting physical evidence
Atmospheric nuclear tests in the 1950s produced similar effects, confirming the airburst mechanism
The event was not fully investigated until 1927, 19 years after it occurred, limiting evidence quality
TIMELINE
Tunguska event occurs at 7:17 AM local time
Kulik begins investigating the event
First expedition reaches the Tunguska site
Chelyabinsk meteor provides comparative data on airbursts
KEY FIGURES
Leonid Kulik
Soviet scientist who led the first expeditions to Tunguska
Vitaly Romeiko
Russian scientist who proposed the comet theory
ORGANIZATIONS
Russian Academy of Sciences
Academic
Soviet Academy of Sciences
Academic
SOURCES
RELATED ENTITIES
PEOPLE
Leonid Kulik
Vitaly Romeiko
ORGANIZATIONS
Russian Academy of Sciences
Soviet Academy of Sciences
EVENTS
Tunguska event occurs at 7:17 AM local time
1908-06-30
Kulik begins investigating the event
1921
First expedition reaches the Tunguska site
1927
Chelyabinsk meteor provides comparative data on airbursts
2013
