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A dazzling meteor lit up skies Thursday night in at least 10 states, from Ohio to Maryland
and all the way down to South Carolina. "It was a huge yellow burning tail streaking
what seemed right over the city," one poster on the American Meteor Society's reporting
page wrote from Virginia Beach, Virginia. "It was angled in a way that it looked like
it was going to crash into the city." Others on Twitter described the meteor, which
appeared a little after 7 p.m., as white, blue or green.
In Silver Spring, Maryland, another poster to the Meteor Society page wrote that it "looked
like a plane on fire close by." It wasn't, of course. It was almost certainly
an unusually bright meteor classified by the American Meteor Society as a fireball -- a
bit of rock, metal or ice from space that shines brighter than Venus as it burns up
in Earth's atmosphere. The object had generated at least 155 reports
to the meteor tracking group as of Friday morning.
A similar event happened late Monday, viewed by at least 100 people from Maryland north
to Connecticut. The organization says "several thousand" meteors that could be classified
as fireballs enter the atmosphere every day, but most go unseen because they burn up over
oceans or uninhabited areas.