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Firefighters think Md. brush fire could have been started by meteorite; NASA not sold

A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteor. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)
A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteorite. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)
A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteor. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)
A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteorite. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)
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A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteor. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)
A brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, Sunday might have been caused by a meteor. (Courtesy Bowie Volunteer Fire Department)

WASHINGTON 鈥 A big brush fire in Bowie, Maryland, took several hours to put out, and while firefighters thought聽that might have been聽because it was started by a meteorite, scientists make a convincing case the cause was more earthly.

The fire started Sunday evening between 5 p.m. and 6 p.m. in a wooded area near Scarlett Oaks Terrace, the聽Bowie Volunteer Fire Department said.

Firefighters haven鈥檛 confirmed the cause yet, but when they finally got the fire out, they found a crater with a rock at the bottom.

They think flames from the rock ignited the trees and bushes in the area.聽They left the rock there.

NASA, however, isn’t buying it.

Mike Kelley, a program scientist in NASA鈥檚 Planetary Defense Coordination Office, tells WTOP that there鈥檚 no way a meteorite caused the fire in Bowie on Sunday evening.

Meteorites 鈥渙n a small scale do not start fires,鈥 Kelley said. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e not hot enough when they reach the ground.鈥

They heat up when they enter the atmosphere, but Kelley says that only the outer millimeter or so heats up. By the time a meteorite hits the ground, it鈥檚 nowhere near hot enough to cause a fire.

As for the crater, Kelley said it looks like a pit dug in the woods, or maybe an embankment, but it鈥檚 not a meteorite impact crater, which he described as 鈥渟omething that looks like it would have popped out of the ground, like a splash.鈥

He added that even though there鈥檚 a rock at the bottom of the hole, that鈥檚 not particularly unusual.

鈥淵es, there鈥檚 a rock at the bottom, but if you dig down four feet to the left, will you see another rock?鈥

But the bottom line is, a meteorite wouldn鈥檛 cause a fire unless it was massive, Kelley said.

The Tunguska event, a blast more powerful than the first atomic bomb and thought to have been started by a meteorite, didn鈥檛 start a fire, though it knocked down an estimated 80,000 trees. The KT impactor, said to have led to the extinction of the dinosaurs, may have started a fire, Kelley said, but it measured miles across.

鈥淚f something on that scale occurred in Maryland, we wouldn鈥檛 be having this conversation,鈥澛燢elley said.

Rick Massimo

Rick Massimo came to WTOP, and to Washington, in 2013 after having lived in Providence, R.I., since he was a child.聽He's the author of "A Walking Tour of the Georgetown Set" and "I Got a Song: A History of the Newport Folk Festival."

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