NASA map shows where meteorites may have fallen in Houston
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Here's where to hunt for large, medium and small meteorites.
ABC13 Houston on MSN
NASA strewn field map shows where pieces of apparent meteor might have landed
NASA shared a strewn field map of Montgomery County and Harris County to illustrate a "simplified estimate of where meteorites landed" after an apparent meteor broke apart in the sky Saturday afternoon.
Rocks from outer space are constantly hurtling toward Earth, slamming into the atmosphere and often exploding into fireballs that both delight and alarm people.
NASA confirmed a fireball meteor exploded over Ohio on March 17, with meteorites possibly hitting Medina County. Didn't see it? Check out the videos.
KTSM El Paso on MSN
Meteor seen, heard across north Houston area
HOUSTON (CW39) — There are multiple reports about an explosion in the sky in north Houston that NASA says was a meteor that landed in southeast Texas. According to NASA, a bright fireball was seen on Saturday around 4:40 p.
A six-foot, six-ton asteroid passed over northeastern Ohio on March 17, bringing the possibility of fragmented pieces scattered across a wide area.
Houston residents reported a mysterious boom that sounded like a large blast happening nearby, while several people claimed that they saw fireballs li.
A loud boom echoed across Texas on Saturday, March 21. Residents initially feared an explosion. Officials confirmed the sound was from a meteor. NASA stated the object broke apart mid-air. This fragmentation created a pressure wave causing the booms heard.
A meteor over Ohio on Tuesday likely led to a loud boom, according to the National Weather Service. NWS Cleveland said the latest GLM imagery shows the meteor caused a loud