bigger than a breadbox?
Posted: Fri Jun 04, 2004 7:19 am
For those of you not currently residing in Pugetopolis, we had a meteorite event two nights ago that has people here talking. Apparently around 2:40am a meteorite managed to make its way all the way through the atmosphere without burning up, creating a second long flash of light that lit up the night sky as if it were daylight. I, unfortunatelly, slept through the whole thing, even the residual sonic booms didn't wake me. But lots of people who were up and about, like delivery drivers, have described the event as 'a giant flash bulb going off'.
Anyway, local scientists are quoted as saying that by their estimates from the degree of brilliance, the rock was the approximate size 'of a computer monitor'. Which got me thinking, what if this had occured in the 50's? What would these scientists have compared the size to then? And then I thought, well a computer monitor is about the same size as a breadbox. What's a breadbox you might ask? My grandma had one in her kitchen, and I guess back then they were fairly common, homemakers would keep loaves of bread inside breadboxes. Thus evolved the common comparative "bigger than a breadbox", still in use, but poorly understood, even today. So my guess is that the 50's scientist might have suggested that this meteorite was the size 'of a breadbox'.
And everyone would have immediately understood how big it was. Interesting how our language evolves as our culture changes.
Anyway, local scientists are quoted as saying that by their estimates from the degree of brilliance, the rock was the approximate size 'of a computer monitor'. Which got me thinking, what if this had occured in the 50's? What would these scientists have compared the size to then? And then I thought, well a computer monitor is about the same size as a breadbox. What's a breadbox you might ask? My grandma had one in her kitchen, and I guess back then they were fairly common, homemakers would keep loaves of bread inside breadboxes. Thus evolved the common comparative "bigger than a breadbox", still in use, but poorly understood, even today. So my guess is that the 50's scientist might have suggested that this meteorite was the size 'of a breadbox'.
And everyone would have immediately understood how big it was. Interesting how our language evolves as our culture changes.