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What Caused the Tunguska Explosion?

In 1908, a massive explosion rocked Siberia, flattening 800 square miles of forest. But what caused it? No crater was found, and theories range from meteors to secret experiments. Let’s dive into one of history’s greatest unsolved mysteries.

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June 30, 1908—Siberia.

0:03

A blinding fireball streaks across the sky, followed by an earth-shaking explosion.

0:08

The blast flattens 80 million trees, yet no impact crater is found.

0:12

Witnesses describe a sky that glowed for days.

0:15

Was it a meteor?

0:16

A comet?

0:17

Or something even stranger?

0:19

Over a century later, the mystery remains unsolved.

0:23

Scientists first suspected a meteorite impact, but no fragments or crater were ever found.

0:29

Some believe it was a comet, its icy body vaporizing before hitting the ground.

0:34

Others suggest an underground gas explosion.

0:37

But could it have been something more mysterious—an alien spacecraft or a secret experiment gone wrong?

0:43

The debate continues.

0:45

Eyewitnesses reported a blue light moving across the sky, followed by a deafening explosion.

0:51

The shockwave shattered windows hundreds of miles away.

0:54

Some even claimed to see strange glowing clouds at night.

0:58

Could this have been an atmospheric explosion?

1:00

A natural phenomenon?

1:01

Or something beyond our understanding?

1:04

The evidence remains inconclusive.

1:06

Modern scientists lean toward a comet or asteroid exploding mid-air, releasing energy equivalent to 1,000 Hiroshima bombs.

1:14

But without definitive proof, theories persist.

1:18

Could it have been an antimatter explosion?

1:20

A black hole passing through Earth?

1:22

The Tunguska Event remains one of history’s greatest unsolved mysteries, leaving us to wonder—what really happened that day?