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1,000 Nukes, Zero Crater: The Tunguska Event & The "Superbolt" Theory What hits with the force of 1,000 atomic bombs but leaves absolutely no fingerprints?  Welcome to the ultimate deep dive into the Tunguska Event, the most violent and baffling cosmic mystery in modern history. In 1908, the remote Siberian Taiga was nearly wiped off the map. A massive explosion flattened 80 million trees over 800 square miles, shattering windows hundreds of kilometers away and lighting up the night sky in London. But here’s the kicker: when the first researchers finally reached ground zero, they found… nothing. No impact crater. No meteorite fragments. No smoking gun. How do you hide an apocalypse? In this episode, we strip away the myths to investigate the terrifying science behind Siberia’s great unsolved explosion. We aren't just talking about stray asteroids. We are exploring the wildest—and most scientifically plausible—theories that attempt to explain this craterless catastrophe. Could a microscopic black hole have passed through the Earth? Was it a test of an early weapon of mass destruction? Or was it an antimatter collision? Plus, we break down a groundbreaking new theory that connects Siberia to the mysterious Bell Island Boom. Could the culprit actually be a Superbolt—a lightning strike so powerful it mimics a nuclear blast? If you love unsolved mysteries, dark history, and space phenomena that defy explanation, you need to hear this. We’re separating the science fiction from the terrifying facts. Topics covered: - The timeline of the 1908 Tunguska Event. - Why researchers have never found a crater or cosmic debris. - The "Superbolt" theory and the Bell Island connection. - Meteor airbursts vs. Black Holes. Buckle up—we’re going to ground zero. 👉 Listen now to solve the enigma!  

📣 New Podcast! "1,000 Nukes, Zero Crater: The Tunguska Event & The "Superbolt" Theory" on @Spreaker #apocalypse #asteroid #bellislandboom #conspiracytheory #cosmichorror #creepy #educational #historypodcast #meteor #mystery #phenomenon #sciencefacts #siberia #space #superbolt #tunguska #viral

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Le pays de Lorient probablement frappé par des « superbolts », des éclairs « très rares » et très puissants L’orage survenu dans la nuit de jeudi 22 à vendredi 23 janvier 2026 à Lorient (Morbihan) et dans les communes limitrophes n’a pas manqué de susciter des réactions. Selon l’Observatoire français des to...

#superbolt dans la nuit du 22 au 23, à #Ploemeur c'est notre quartier qui a été touché. Je dormais profondément et me suis rendormi, mais je me souviens. Les plombs de notre maison ont sautés.
www.ouest-france.fr/meteo/orage/...

#météo

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#Bretagne #orage #SaintMalo #meteobzh
⚡️ #superbolt à Saint-Malo hier soir !
Regardez l'intensité du flash lumineux à la 34ème seconde
Webcam de notre partenaire @skaping.bsky.social

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