[meteorite-list] NPA 02-14-1955 Weird Fireball Flashes Across East Texas Area

From: MARK BOSTICK <thebigcollector_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Jan 7 10:36:05 2005
Message-ID: <BAY4-F17E43400E4D3905C481797B3940_at_phx.gbl>

Paper: The Port Arthur News
City: Port Arthur, Texas
Date: Monday, February 14, 1955
Page: 1

Weird Fireball Flashes Across East Texas Area

     TYLER, Tex. (AP) - A fireball, its weird green light casting a fiery
glow over three men in an airport control tower, flashed like a "huge
electric arc" across the east Texas piney woods last night.
     It was apparently a meteorite. There were unconfirmed reports it
exploded or hit the ground, but no evidence of it had been found.
     Information indicated it was first seen here and disappeared some 60
miles south near Lufkin. But the Weather bureau at Dallas got reports of
people seeing its glow as far as Jackson, Miss., to the east and Mineral
Wells in west Texas.
    The most vivid account came from J. N. Aber, a control tower operator at
Pounds Field here. Here's his story:
     "Around midnight this light seemed to pop out of the sky directly above
us. It looked like a huge electric arc. It was green-ish, like the tip of a
welder's torch.
    "It was going due south. There were three of us in the tower. We of
course had the lights on, but the room lighted up brilliantly. It was a
blinding light, the brightest I ever saw. We all turned and watched it
disappear to the south, about 30 degrees above the horizon. It looked like a
football with a short tail. It lasted just a second."

No Injuries, Damage

     There were no reports of injuries or damage.
     John Fonataine, aidway operator specialist at Lufkin, said:
     "Along about midnight we felt a precussion as if from an explosion. We
didn't see a flash, but it was reportedly seen in town. They said it went
down somewhere between Tyler and Lufkin. Everybody in town is stirred up
about it. Several said that when it hit it felt like a car door slamming."
     The fireball was also seen from Longview.
     The sheriff's dispatcher at Jacksonville, C. M. Hopkins, said he had no
reports of the meteorite's exploding or hitting ground. Neither were there
any such reports from Rusk.

Flood of Phone Calls

     The glow lighted up the sky southeast of Dallas. Phone calls flooded
the Weather bureau there.
     Many said the fireball was red, white and other colors. A Dallas
meteorologist said, "it was probably a meteorite, and the color depends on
when you saw it."

(end)

Clear Skies,
Mark Bostick
Wichita, Kansas
http://www.meteoritearticles.com
http://www.kansasmeteoritesociety.com
http://www.imca.cc

http://stores.ebay.com/meteoritearticles

PDF copy of this article, and most I post, is available upon e-mail request.

The NPA in the subject line, stands for Newspaper Article and is for quick
reference.
Received on Fri 07 Jan 2005 10:35:14 AM PST


Help support this free mailing list:



StumbleUpon
del.icio.us
reddit
Yahoo MyWeb