Robert Verish wrote:

�text deleted�

"It seems, as I read it from the 
information that I found, that a 
lighthouse was hit by a "lightning 
type of fireball" and not a 
meteoroid fireball. Also about the 
fact that a cruiser/ship was hit 
by a Meteor type fireball as it said 
in the book and that that most of 
the men jumped ship after the strike. 
It seems that the fireball took place 
about the same time as that lighthouse 
was struck but once again not a meteor 
fireball but a lightning strike. While 
a ship was close to shore when the ship 
was destroyed, a few members survived. 
However if it was close to shore, why 
did it take so long for those crew 
members to get to shore. Mystery 
again?"

Whether a mystery exists or not depends on the local
currents at the time of the incident. If the currents
/ tides were offshore at the time, the survivors 
could very easily have been slept out sea, even if 
they were near to shore. If there were stonrg offshore
currents /tides at the time of the incidence, the 
survivors could very well have gone unwillingly on 
a long sea vovage even thought they were near to shore.


Yours,

Paul
Baton Rouge, LA


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