[meteorite-list] NPA 12-11-1946: Meteorites Burn Over Midwest Sky
From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Mon Sep 13 09:37:58 2004 Message-ID: <BAY4-F62VoS4G56Qfak000af9e3_at_hotmail.com> Paper: Council Bluffs Iowa Nonparell City: Council Bluffs, Iowa Date: December 11, 1946 Meteorites Burn Over Midwest Sky A fiery meteor - said to resemble everything from "a blue streak of light" to "a pale green ball with a very bright red tail" Tuesday night illuminated skies over Council Bluffs for the second time in 14 hours. Similar meteorites were sighted by five mid-western states. Astronomers said the brief displays, which brilliantly lighted the skies, were part of an annual shower from the Gemini constellation. Astounding reports were still being made Wednesday from points as far east as Springfield, Ill., and west as far as Hastings, Neb. Displays were sighted at Shenandoah, Hamburg and other southwestern Iowa towns. Municipal airport officials in Omaha said the meteor passed over this area at 7:06 1/2 p.m. The other meteor, less brilliant, was reported here at 5:15 a.m. Tuesday. The two fiery displays traveled in different directions. Tuesday morning's meteor show eastward through the skies, while the one at night flashed in a westerly direction. Descriptions of the blazing meteorites varied considerably. Many local persons said the evening display appeared like a blazing softball shooting through the sky." "It looked like a blazing softball," said John Campbell, 3400 West Broadway. "It left a long luminous tail. For a moment I thought it was a flaming plane plunging toward the ground." Eye-witnesses at Hamburg reported a blinding meteor lit up that town about the same time as the one seen here. Moments later it was seen zooming to earth. "The meteor hit about 20 miles northwest of Hamburg, probably in the vicinity of Thurman or Percival," C. C. Mincer of Hamburg said. Other Hamburg eye-witnesses offered these comments: "It was just like having an immense number of flash bulbs go off." "When the meteor struck, fire three or four blocks long blew into the air." Before dawn, the sky was brilliantly lighted for a 250-mile stretch between McPherson, Kan., and Garden City, Kan., spectators said, At Garden City, freight handlers reported hearing a roar accompany the flashing light. At McPherson, a long white trail of smoke hung in a windless sky for 30 minutes after the meteorite passed. Although the sight was observed at approximately the same time. Tuesday night in Springfield, Ill., and Council Bluffs and Omaha, an observer at Yerkes observatory, Williams Bay. Wis., said it was doubtful that the same meteorite was see in both places, since most burned out by atmospheric friction in "a fraction of a second to five seconds." Prof. Oliver C. Rollins, University of Nebraska astronomer, said the Gemini meteor was scheduled to appear from Dec. 10 to 12. Many persons in Topeka, Kan., were alarmed at the phenomenon, and called newspapers and police. Reports were prevalent in Lincoln, Neb., that an explosion, which caused houses to shake and windows to rattle, followed the light. Astronomers, however, said most meteorites were sighted at an average distance of 50 miles. ------- Save Waste Paper ---------- (end) www.meteoritearticles.com Received on Mon 13 Sep 2004 09:33:21 AM PDT |
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