Recall the date October 2 1951. At precisely 18:13 an extraordinary event unfolded over Denmark. It was the Meteornedslaget i Aarhus i 1951. Its tale is etched in the annals of science and local lore.
The meteor was seen across Denmark. It was also visible in southern Norway and Sweden. Even Holsten in Germany witnessed this celestial event. This was the first confirmed meteorite fall since 1878.
Imagine a football-sized fireball streaking across the sky. An eye-witness in Hammel described it vividly. A red-hot sphere spewed sparks like a welding machine. Then a sharp white flash transformed it into a wheel resembling fireworks. A strong column of smoke trailed behind it. The flash was so intense that animals reacted. They cried out in the fields. Thunder-like sounds echoed across the landscape.
Now here at Riis Skov stands a memorial stone. This marks the spot where a piece of the meteor landed. A railway engineer P.W. Holm discovered a 300-gram fragment. It was about the size of a child’s fist. He found it near the slope between Den Permanente Badeanstalt and Aarhus Harbour. Another larger piece weighing 420 grams was found by Holger Elgaard. He found it at a lumberyard near Aarhus University. This is now Nobelparken. These fragments are pieces of the Meteornedslaget i Aarhus i 1951.
Ole Rømer Observatory in Aarhus collected about 400 eyewitness accounts. Astronomer Axel V. Nielsen gathered more information. He corresponded with witnesses and toured Denmark for a week. From this, he calculated the meteor’s path.
The meteor traveled northwest. Its first sighting was 50 km southeast of Warnemünde in Germany. It was 143 km above the Earth and 304 km from Aarhus. The meteor flew over the Baltic Sea. It passed Lolland, Storebælt, Samsø and Kattegat. Finally it crashed near here in Aarhus. This solidified the area as the Meteornedslaget i Aarhus i 1951.
The Aarhus meteorite is a stone meteorite of the chondrite type. It contains 25.75% iron. This meteorite is one of only four similar finds in Denmark. Most of the meteorite is housed at the Natural History Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen. Smaller fragments are in New York City and Washington D.C.. There’s also a piece at the Natural History Museum in Aarhus.
The Meteornedslaget i Aarhus i 1951 is more than just a space rock. It is a tangible connection to the cosmos. It fell to Earth in spectacular fashion. It left behind a story of science, observation and a little bit of luck. Today this stone stands as a silent witness. It reminds us to look up and wonder about the universe. It is a humbling experience to stand where a piece of the heavens once fell.