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The Russian City That Was Slammed By A Meteor Wants To Build 'Meteor Disneyland'

The Telegraph   

The Russian City That Was Slammed By A Meteor Wants To Build 'Meteor Disneyland'
Thelife1 min read

Russian Meteorite

AP

In this photo taken with a mobile phone camera, a meteorite contrail is seen in Chelyabinsk region on Friday, Feb. 15, 2013. A meteor streaked across the sky of Russia's Ural Mountains on Friday morning, causing sharp explosions and reportedly injuring around 100 people, including many hurt by broken glass. (AP Photo/Sergey Hametov)

The 10,000-ton meteor entered the Earth's atmosphere producing a sonic boom. It shattered into pieces between 18 and 32 miles above Chelyabinsk, to the east of the Ural Mountains in southern Russia.

Debris fell on the city, injuring around 1,000 people, damaging buildings and leaving a large hole in an ice-covered lake.

The spot could now feature in plans to capitalize on international fascination with the event and bring tourists to the city.

“Space sent us a gift and we need to make use of it,” Natalia Gritsay, a regional tourism official, told Bloomberg. “We need our own Eiffel Tower or Statue of Liberty.”

Ideas for possible tourist attractions include a “Meteor Disneyland”, an annual cosmic music and fireworks festival, and a pyramid with a beacon at its tip that floats on the lake.

At a recent brainstorming meeting, the city mayor, Andrei Orlov, also suggested creating a diving centre in the lake for tourists who wanted to search for pieces of the meteorite.

One local tour company, Sputnik, has already organized two summer tours of the city for Japanese tourists.

"One is a two-day tour to the impact site at Chebarkul, while the other includes city sightseeing and will last longer," the company manager Elena Kolesnikova said. "The price is around $800 (£530) per person, which includes a hotel."

Chelyabinsk’s museum has been quick off the mark and installed a Meteor Day exhibit as its main attraction, displaying a meteorite next to the front pages of international newspapers reporting the event.

Some of the one million residents initially thought the sound was caused by a plane crash but videos of the meteor were soon posted on the internet revealing the true cause.

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