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Rare 'daytime fireball' creates powerful sonic boom as 7-ton smeteor explodes above eastern US
A fridge-size space rock spectacularly broke apart over Ohio at 40,000 mph, creating a loud boom and a rare "fireball" that shone in the bright blue daytime sky. The rare sight, which exploded with ...
Eyewitness accounts and videos taken from across the Midwest reveal the streak of a large fireball across the daytime sky ...
A sonic boom was heard across several states Tuesday after a meteor broke the sound barrier over the skies of Ohio, according ...
A fiery streak across the sky and a loud boom greeted many residents of northeast Ohio on the morning of March 17. The rare celestial spectacle, which took place a little before 9 A.M. Eastern ...
Residents across northeastern Ohio received a rude—or at least extremely unexpected—wake-up call this morning. According to ...
The explosion produced a loud booming noise and even shook the ground.
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Meteor traveling 35,000 mph explodes over Texas, possibly striking a Houston house
Learn how a fast-moving meteor exploded over Texas and where NASA says fragments may have landed near Houston.
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Cannonball-size meteorite crashes through roof of Texas home as multiple 'fireballs' rain over US
A suspected space rock, around the size of a cantaloupe, was found in the bedroom of a Houston home after crashing through the building's roof. It is likely a fragment of one of several "fireball" ...
"There's a hole in the ceiling, big dent in the floor, another little piece in the ceiling, and a big rock on the floor, and it just scared me to death," the woman said.
NASA has confirmed a fireball meteor exploded over Ohio on March 17, with meteorites possibly hitting Medina County. Check ...
NASA later confirmed that a one-ton, three-foot-wide meteor had zoomed across the sky above part of Texas. It became visible at an altitude of 49 miles above Stagecoach, a town northwest of Houston.
It happened Saturday, March 21, at 4:39 p.m. Central Time when the meteor slammed into Earth’s atmosphere. It first became visible about 49 miles above Stagecoach, Texas, northwest of Houston.
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