Users Online Now:
1,926
(
Who's On?
)
Visitors Today:
1,957,635
Pageviews Today:
2,891,482
Threads Today:
793
Posts Today:
16,408
11:32 PM
Directory
Adv. Search
Topics
Forum
Back to Forum
Back to Thread
REPLY TO THREAD
Subject
2/24/2015 -- Giant Fireball Meteor over Montana, Idaho, Colorado, Utah, Washington, and Oregon! Weird Flash in the Sky!!!!
User Name
Font color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
Black
Font:
Default
Verdana
Tahoma
Ms Sans Serif
In accordance with industry accepted best practices we ask that users limit their copy / paste of copyrighted material to the relevant portions of the article you wish to discuss and no more than 50% of the source material, provide a link back to the original article and provide your original comments / criticism in your post with the article.
[quote:Anonymous Coward 66073387:MV8yODAxMjIxXzQ5MDY1MzkyX0UwQjQ2QTFB] Yeah...we believe what they tell us to think...uh huh... http://hisz.rsoe.hu/alertmap/site/index.php?pageid=event_desc&edis_id=CO-20150225-47121-USA Event into space in USA on Wednesday, 25 February, 2015 at 12:41 (12:41 PM) UTC. People from Arizona to Canada have reported seeing bright lights in the sky as a Chinese rocket burned up in the atmosphere. Witnesses described the lights as a group of about three dozen fireballs moving slowly from south to north late Monday. Canadian photographer Neil Zeller says it looked like a cluster of fireballs followed by a long orange tail. A NASA official told the Salt Lake Tribune the lights were a Chinese rocket booster that broke apart about 10 p.m. Pacific Time. Calls to NASA from The Associated Press were directed to U.S. Strategic Command, who couldn't immediately confirm what it was. The clear nights make it easy to catch glimpses of falling objects in space. Sunday night, many Oregonians caught a glimpse of another fireball, this one a meteor, falling to earth. But Jim Todd, the Director of Space Science Education at OMSI, told KGW people are more likely to see meteors falling than space junk, especially over such a populated area. Dick Pugh is another fireball expert with Cascadia Meteorite Laboratory and Portland State University, whose goal is to locate new meteorites [b]with the help of grants from NASA and private donors. [/b]Mike Hankey with the American Meteor Society says his organization got more than 150 reports of the event from nine Western states and Canada. [/quote]
Original Message
There shall be signs in the Sun, the Moon and the Stars
Pictures (click to insert)
General
Politics
Bananas
People
Potentially Offensive
Emotions
Big Round Smilies
Aliens and Space
Friendship & Love
Textual
Doom
Misc Small Smilies
Religion
Love
Random
View All Categories
|
Next Page >>