Meteorite Hits Girl
redcliffe writes "The BBC has a story about a 14 year old North Yorkshire girl who was hit, on the foot, by a meteorite. Where's Bruce Willis when you need him?" The young Miss Carlton notes: "This does not happen that often in Northallerton"; no doubt the City of York is where most meteorites land.
'Meteorite' hits girl
Siobhan Cowton: "I saw it fall from above roof height"
The odds against being hit by a meteorite are billions to one - but a teenager in North Yorkshire may have had one land on her foot.
Siobhan Cowton, 14, was getting into the family car outside her Northallerton home at 1030 BST on Thursday when a stone fell on her from the sky.
This does not happen very often in Northallerton
Siobhan Cowton
Noticing it was "quite hot", she showed it to her father Niel.
The family now plan to have the stone analysed by scientists at Durham University.
"I saw it fall from above roof height," Siobhan told BBC News Online.
"It looked very unusual, with a bubbled surface and tiny indentations like volcanic lava.
'Shiny'
"It was shiny on one side and looked rusty as if it contained iron.
"I've seen shooting stars before - but nothing like this. This does not happen very often in Northallerton."
Mr Cowton, 45, told BBC News Online he would take the stone to be analysed himself.
The stone may have come from Mars
"It is not going to leave my sight because it is a very rare find," he said.
"It is worth a lot to Siobhan.
"We will have it mounted in a glass presentation case so she can keep it for the rest of her life.
"After all it is not every day you get hit by a meteorite.
"The odds of winning the Lottery are better."
The stone could have come from Mars, according to expert on Earth impacts Dr Benny Peiser, of Liverpool John Moores University.
"It could be billions of years old and come from the earliest formation of the solar system," he told the Daily Mail newspaper.
Most meteors are between five and 60 centimetres (1.95 in and 1 ft 11.5 in) long, according to Durham University physical geography lecturer Dr Ben Horton.
"Sometimes they have shallow depressions and cavities," he said.