Large Meteor! Wisconsin Iowa Bolide Fireball 14APR2010
(click on image to view fireball)
image source:
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Department of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
http://www.aos.wisc.edu/
Looped image of fireball.
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Reports of large bolide with booms seen in Wisconsin and Iowa. More details as they are reported. Any eyewitnesses please post a comment. State you city or location , what YOU saw or heard. ANY PHOTOS OF the event? PLEASE email me.
My email address is drtanuki@gmail.com if you wish to contact me.
updates in the news:
Madison Meteor? WKOW-TV.com 27 News Chief Meteorologist Bob Lindmeier says it is possible a large meteor passed through the area, but it's hard to know exactly what caused the bright ... | ||||||||
Did You See the Light Show Wednesday Night? WSAW The National Weather Service is reporting it was either a meteor or space debris. It was apparently seen as far away as Kansas City. ... | ||||||||
"Giant Fireball" Lights up the Night Sky KCRG The meteor burning through the atmosphere appeared to be a “giant fireball” and reports have been coming into the KCRG-TV9 newsroom from viewers across ...
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----- Original Message -----
From: mlangen
To: MeteoriteCollectors @yahoogroups. com
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 10:36 PM
Subject: Re: [MeteoriteCollector s] Fireball -- Southern Wisconsin
"Reports now streaming in from as far east as Grand Rapids, MI, as well as Iowa and Missouri.
----- Original Message -----
From: mlangenf
To: MeteoriteCollectors ATyahoogroupsDOT com
Sent: Wednesday, April 14, 2010 10:30 PM
Subject: [MeteoriteCollector s] Fireball -- Southern Wisconsin
Roughly 15 minutes ago I saw several very bright flashes in the sky through a west-facing window here in Monticello, Wisconsin. A nearby amateur astronomer acquaintance emailed to report that she had seen a bright "red and green" fireball transit the western horizon just below a local treeline. There was no perceptible sonic boom here.
I do not yet have estimated azimuth or elevation estimates, nor do I know whether the track was right-to-left or left-to-right from the observer's viewpoint. There was no perceptible sonic boom here. Given the extraordinary brightness of this event, however, I suspect there may be a new fall some distance to the west."
posted by Mark on met-collectors site
Also for eyewitnesses please go to the AMS website via the sidebar link and complete a witness report. Thanks!
- Fireball Report Form, Have you seen an extremely bright meteor? Share your sighting with others across the globe by filling out our fireball report form.
- 2010 Fireball Sightings Table, Lists fireballs sightings submitted to the AMS for 2010. Compiled by Robert Lunsford.