| With a heart of sand and a head of coal
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| Oh, Nakhla dog, oh, Nakhla dog
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| And who would have noticed
|
| And who would have known you
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| Nakhla dog, oh, Nakhla dog
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| You be the meteor and I’ll be the ground below
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| You be the chainsaw and I will be the pine
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| And with a flash of paint across my waist
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| I will be waiting with my head on fire
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| And all at once, like ashes in the moment
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| Oh, Nakhla dog, oh, Nakhla dog
|
| You be the meteor and I’ll be the ground below
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| You be the chainsaw and I will be the pine
|
| And with a flash of paint across my waist
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| I will be waiting with my head on fire
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| And I will be waiting with a wagging tail
|
| (Spoken:
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| The Nakhla meteorite fell to Earth on June 28th, 1911, at approximately 9 AM in
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| Egypt. |
| Several explosions were heard before it fell to Earth, landing in an
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| area 4.5 kilometers in diameter, with around 40 pieces being recovered.
|
| The fragments were buried in the ground up to a meter deep. |
| One fragment was
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| said to have landed on a dog, as observed by a local farmer, vaporizing the
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| animal instantly. |
| Since no remains of the dog were recovered, and there were no
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| other eyewitnesses to the dog’s demise, this story remains apocryphal.
|
| However, the story of the Nakhla dog has since become something of a legend
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| among astronomers.) |