Australia baffled as unidentified mystery object washes up on beach (BBC News)soyagi@yiffit.net to World News@lemmy.world – 174 points – 12 months agobbc.com27Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentJust an exhausted rocket stage. Definitely not explosive.Yeah, but they didn't know that.I mean, like how an exhausted aerosol can is 'definitely not explosive'.So probably housing all sorts of dangerous fuels? Anyone remember the Chinese one that crashed in China a few years back and was super toxic?Might have residue of hydrazine or other nasty stuff, though. Definitely not safe to be around until it's been checked out.It’s weird how the “experts” cited in the article defaulted to guessing it’s from an airplane. You’d think they’d default to rocket debris.
Just an exhausted rocket stage. Definitely not explosive.Yeah, but they didn't know that.I mean, like how an exhausted aerosol can is 'definitely not explosive'.So probably housing all sorts of dangerous fuels? Anyone remember the Chinese one that crashed in China a few years back and was super toxic?Might have residue of hydrazine or other nasty stuff, though. Definitely not safe to be around until it's been checked out.It’s weird how the “experts” cited in the article defaulted to guessing it’s from an airplane. You’d think they’d default to rocket debris.
Yeah, but they didn't know that.I mean, like how an exhausted aerosol can is 'definitely not explosive'.
So probably housing all sorts of dangerous fuels? Anyone remember the Chinese one that crashed in China a few years back and was super toxic?
Might have residue of hydrazine or other nasty stuff, though. Definitely not safe to be around until it's been checked out.
It’s weird how the “experts” cited in the article defaulted to guessing it’s from an airplane. You’d think they’d default to rocket debris.
Just an exhausted rocket stage. Definitely not explosive.
Yeah, but they didn't know that.
I mean, like how an exhausted aerosol can is 'definitely not explosive'.
So probably housing all sorts of dangerous fuels?
Anyone remember the Chinese one that crashed in China a few years back and was super toxic?
Might have residue of hydrazine or other nasty stuff, though. Definitely not safe to be around until it's been checked out.
It’s weird how the “experts” cited in the article defaulted to guessing it’s from an airplane. You’d think they’d default to rocket debris.