Almost all of Siberia saw a UAP fall and heard explosions Source and video: (https://bit.ly/3CN0ty1) Ural scientists collect data about a large burning object that fell in Siberia. The space body landed the previous morning in the deep taiga, but its fall was filmed by dozens of surveillance cameras in cities across the region. This burning object is significantly inferior to the famous Chelyabinsk meteorite, but is still of considerable interest to researchers, said Viktor Grokhovsky, chief researcher at the Department of Physical Methods and Quality Control Instruments of UrFU. - Like any fresh fall, this is extremely interesting: the substances came from some part of our solar system. We are currently collecting data. It is hard to go on an expedition in search of a burning object immediately after a fall. There are swamps, forests, there are no settlements for hundreds of kilometers at all, - the scientist said. According to Viktor Grokhovsky, the meteorite fell apart in the area between the Yenisei and Chulym rivers, it was very large. - This is a good bright object, it was seen in the morning according to Tomsk time. Powerful, with good fragmentation, it probably rained over a large area. Almost all of Siberia saw the fall and heard explosions, and Kemerovo, and Novosibirsk, and Tomsk. If we manage to determine the place of the fall or the first finds [of fragments] appear, we will send a detachment. This burning object is much smaller in power than the Chelyabinsk meteorite, its size, I think, is one or two meters, as far as one can judge from the video, - said Grokhovsky. Now specialists are studying video from surveillance cameras and exchanging data with colleagues - both professional space explorers and amateurs. The fall of a burning object on February 15, 2013 in the Chelyabinsk region was one of the main events of the decade.