TheLocalYokel
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- Jan 14, 2009
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- #101
New 'fireball' meteor spotted days after South West 'sonic boom'
Last week, hundreds of people took to social media to share videos and pictures of the fireball over the West Country
A couple of fireball meteors apparently reported over the UK recently.
When I was growing up in the Somerset countryside in the 1950s I was fascinated by 'shooting stars'. There was little light pollution in rural areas then and on a clear night the sky was one huge aerial tapestry of twinkling lights.
Since those days opportunities for stargazing have been limited and it's not something I spend a lot of time on now. However, I've long been interested by the Tunguska Event in Eastern Siberia on 30 June 1908. On that morning the largest asteroid impact in recorded history occurred. It was in a remote, sparsely populated region of Siberia. The explosion flattened around 80 million trees over an area of 830 square miles.
Witnesses reported seeing a fireball followed by a flash and noise like artillery fire with powerful shock waves that broke windows and knocked people off their feet hundreds of miles away.
There was no crater and it's believed the asteroid didn't actually strike Earth but exploded as an air burst three to six miles above the Earth's surface.
There were reports that in London the following night it was possible to read unaided in the middle of the night such was the brightness of the sky.
The first scientific expedition didn't reach the area until 1927 and since then there have been many studies and scientific papers published, mainly in Russia.
Later conspiracy theories included contact with an alien spaceship and a nuclear explosion pre-dating the Manhatten Project of World War 2.