Scientists are analysing a small blue rock which killed a man after it fell from the sky in southern India to determine if it is a meteorite.
The rock slammed into the ground at an engineering college in Tamil Nadu state over the weekend, shattering a water cooler and sending splinters and shards flying. Police said a bus driver standing nearby died after being hit by the debris.
Experts at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics are examining the site, near Vellore city, and conducting a chemical analysis to determine whether the rock came from space.
If confirmed, it would be the first recorded death from falling fragments of space rock in almost 200 years.
Jayalalithaa Jayaram, the chief minister of Tamil Nadu, has said a bus driver at a college in her state was killed by the object and awarded 100,000 rupees (€1,310) in compensation to his family.
“A meteorite fell within the college premises,” Jayalalithaa said. The man “sustained serious injuries and died while on the way to the hospital”.
The bus driver was standing on a patch of grass near the college cafeteria when he was killed, while two gardeners and a student were injured, officials said. A dark blue stone resembling a diamond was found at the scene.
Government officials at first suspected the blast was caused by explosives accidentally left after building work. However, investigations found no evidence of explosive material at the site.
“When no evidence of explosive material was found, we moved to the theory that it might be a meteorite,” said a district official who asked not be named. “It is not confirmed yet as samples need to be analysed.”
A team from the Indian Institute of Astrophysics was expected to visit on Tuesday to collect samples.
G Baskar, the principal of the college in Vellore district, was working in his cabin when he heard an explosion.
“It was a sound like nothing I’ve ever heard before,” he said. “There was no smell at all, no fire, nothing.”
The last reported death from a meteorite strike was in 1825, according to a list kept by International Comet Quarterly, a scientific journal.
Simon Goodwin, an astrophysics expert from Britain’s University of Sheffield, said meteorite deaths were rare because the rocks usually burn up when passing through the Earth’s atmosphere or land in the ocean or hit remote areas.
“When you look at the fraction of the Earth’s surface that is heavily populated, it’s not very much,” he said.
In 2013, a meteorite exploded over central Russia, raining fireballs over a vast area and causing a shock wave that smashed windows, damaged buildings and injured 1,200 people.
Agencies