NASA confirms meteor streaked across southeast Texas
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Meteorite hunters are combing Ohio for fragments of a space rock that streaked across the sky earlier this week.
A loud boom heard and felt widely across parts of Ohio and Pennsylvania on Tuesday was likely the result of a meteor.
NASA says a loud boom, heard across multiple U.S. states on Tuesday, was caused by a meteor caught in several eyewitness videos.
Did you hear a loud boom this morning? According to the National Weather Service, it apparently was the result of a meteor.
At last, a reason to visit Ohio. Meteorite hunters are descending on the Buckeye State after a huge meteor streaked across the sky and rained down interplanetary fragments. The space rock — a six-foot-wide,
According to the National Weather Service, the loud sonic boom was caused by the meteor. A NASA spokesperson spoke with reporter Clay LePard, confirming the meteor was spotted near Medina. "I woke up this morning, and the sky fell, so I feel like Chicken Little right now," Bill Cooke, NASA's lead for the Meteoroid Environment Office, said.
Skies across Northeast Ohio lit up with a fireball Tuesday morning, caused by an asteroid weighing about seven tons.
A streaking fireball lit the starkly cold Tuesday morning sky and detonated with the force of 250 tons of TNT, rattling windows and alarming Northeast Ohioans.