Subject: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio! Sun Sep 29, 2013 11:52 am
Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio!
Posted By: Dave404 [Send E-Mail] Date: Sunday, 29-Sep-2013 01:28:13 http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=288286 Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio!
From Dahboo77 on Youtube. Heard about this guys?
https://www.youtube.com/v/_SfQJLXwzB0 Dave404.
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GROUNDZERO
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Subject: Re: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio! Mon Sep 30, 2013 3:12 pm
It does say "unconfirmed" but still...
Guest Guest
Subject: REVELATION 12:12 Tue Oct 01, 2013 10:16 am
Meteor Explodes Over Ohio, Kills Two 2013:
Notice where it hit, 4 miles from the 'Great Serpent Effigy Mound'!! REVELATION 12:12-Woe to the inhabiters of the Earth and of the sea! For the Devil is come down unto you,having great wrath!
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http://www.adguk-blog.com/2013/09/meteor-explodes-over-ohio-kills-two-2013.html Meteor Explodes Over Ohio, Kills Two 2013 05:11 ADG UK 6 comments
The skies over Ohio lit up late Friday night when a meteor exploded over Columbus.
Several witnesses say the event was so bright that it lit up the night sky and cast shadows on the ground, according to the American Meteor Society website.
Also, loud booms were heard with the explosion and a visible contrail was seen swirling in the sky right after the meteor blew up.
The event was captured in northeast Ohio on a NASA all-sky camera in Hiram, Ohio, at 11:33 p.m.
Spaceweather.com reported the meteor hit the atmosphere at 114,000 m.p.h. and was visible in 14 states.
Fragments from the fireball reportedly hit a home in northern Adams County, Ohio, a few miles outside the city of Peebles causing a house fire. Those reports are unconfirmed. The six alarm fire left fireman battling the blaze into the early hours of the morning. It is unknown at this time if the residents made it out safely. A neighbor said the meteor crossed over the city and hit near the Locust Grove Cemetery just four miles from the Great Serpent Effigy Mound. Update: As of the morning of September 28, 2013, a home outside of Peebles, Ohio, in the Locust Grove area of Adams County burned to the ground last night, the two residents of the home, an elderly couple, Jane and Lyle Lambert, died as a result of smoke inhalation.
The fire is believed to have been caused from the meteor, or pieces of the meteor, that hit the home. The state fire marshal is investigating the fire. SEE LINK FOR VIDEO
quietobserver Super Elite
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Subject: Re: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio! Tue Oct 01, 2013 11:00 am
Interesting. I posted this in another thread but there's actually a group that catalogs meteorite sightings.
http://www.amsmeteors.org/
Latest Major AMS Events » All AMS Events
Everyday, we receive reports about Fireballs. Here are some of the latest major Fireball Events:
Sep 29 : 5 reports from IL, IN & WI Sep 29 : 5 reports from MD & OH Sep 29 : 21 reports from DC, DE, MA, MD, NJ... Sep 28 : 376 reports from AL, CT, GA, KY, MA... Sep 28 : 14 reports from IN, MD, NY, OH, ON...
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GROUNDZERO
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Subject: Re: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio! Tue Oct 01, 2013 11:38 am
Reports of meteor sightings are coming into the American Meteor Society by the thousands. According to one of the latest reports posted at the American Meteor Society website, “Its been a busy week for the AMS as we are bombarded by fireball reports from all different parts of the country. The latest event took place over Alabama and Georgia last night September 28th 7:30 PM local time. Over 250 witnesses from Virginia, Maryland, Kentucky, Tennessee, North Carolina, Alabama and Georgia have reported the event so far. Below is a heat map of the witnesses who saw the event. Click the image below for the event detail page and witness reports.”[1] Exactly why these meteors are coming into the atmosphere at this time is unknown. NASA and NOAA have yet to publish any reports on this phenomenon, although they did confirm the September 10, 2013 meteor that streaked across the sky in Alabama in theguardian.com article ‘Meteor enters atmosphere over Alabama and disintegrates, says Nasa’.An excerpt from the article reads, “Officials at the Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville say a baseball-size fragment of a comet entered Earth’s atmosphere above Alabama at 8:18pm CDT Monday. Nasa officials say the meteor traveled at a speed of 76,000 mph. They say just three seconds after hitting the atmosphere, it disintegrated 25 miles above the central Alabama town of Woodstock, producing a flash of light. Nasa spokeswoman Janet Anderson says that because it penetrated so deep into Earth’s atmosphere, eyewitnesses heard sonic booms.” [2]
The thousands of sightings of meteors are located at the American Meteor Society Observation page, where you can also sign-up to be a registered user. Intellihub.com will be monitoring this news and possibly a separate page for these reports as they happen. [3] Any video reports submitted to Intellihub.com can be emailed to[email=//tips@intellihub.com]tips@intellihub.com[/email] Interestingly, there are reports of meteor sightings from 40 states, including Atlanta, GA, Alabama, South Carolina, North Carolina, Kentucky and Tennessee as of September 28, 2013. Register to make reports at http://www.amsmeteors.org/ One explanation of the increase in sighting is mentioned on the American Meteor Society website in the article ‘Meteor Activity Outlook for September 28 – October 4, 2013’ which explains, “The September-October Lyncids (SOL) are only well seen on 3 nights centered on September 29th. Maximum occurs on the 30th when the radiant is located at 07:24 (111) +47. This position lies in western Lynx, 12 degrees north of the second magnitude star known as Castor (Alpha Geminorum). This area of the sky is best placed in the sky during the last hour before dawn, when it lies highest above the horizon in a dark sky. Rates at maximum are expected to be near one shower member per hour as seen from the northern hemisphere. These meteors can be seen from the tropical southern hemisphere but rates would be less than one per hour. With an entry velocity of 67 km/sec., most activity from this radiant would be of swift speed.” [5] Earthsky.org posted an article by Deborah Byrd titled “U.S. sees another bright fireball on September 27’ which covers the meteor sightings in detail, which reads, “The American Meteor Society (AMS) has reported at least 373 reports of another bright fireball – a very bright meteor, likely a small chunk of natural incoming space debris – over the U.S. last night (September 27, 2013). These reports followed a similar event over approximately the same area the day before (September 26). The AMS called the coincidence of two bright fireballs, or bright meteors, spotted over approximately the same region on consecutive days “surprising.” Witnesses from Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland, North Carolina, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Virginia, Wisconsin and West Virginia reported a bright light moving across the night sky on September 27 at around 11:33 p.m. local time, according to the AMS.” [6]
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GROUNDZERO
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Subject: Re: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio! Wed Oct 02, 2013 2:10 pm
check the numbers in red...
A brilliant fireball lit up the skies over the midwestern United States, treating bystanders on the ground to an amazing light show last Friday (Sept. 27). The cosmic display came courtesy of a meteoroid traveling at about 114,000 miles per hour (51 km/s) that crashed into Earth's atmosphere high above Columbus, Ohio. The light show could be seen in 14 states. A NASA all-sky camera in Hiram Ohio captured the fireball as it streaked through the sky at 11:33 p.m. EDT (0333 Sept. 28 GMT). You can see video of the remarkable fireball here.
"This was a very bright event," Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid EnvironmentOffice told Spaceweather.com. "Flares saturated our meteor cameras, and made determination of the end point (the terminus of the fireball's flight through the atmosphere) virtually impossible. Judging from the brightness, we are dealing with a meter class object."
[url=http://pinterest.com/pin/create/button/?url=http%3A//www.space.com/23001-meteor-fireball-ohio-video.html&media=http://i.space.com/images/i/000/033/220/original/fireballohio.png?1380551331&description=A meteoroid traveling at about 114%2C000 mph%2C slammed into Earth%27s atmosphere almost directly over Columbus%2C Ohio. It was visible from 14 U.S. States. Image captured Sept. 27%2C 2013. ][/url]A meteoroid traveling at about 114,000 mph, slammed into Earth's atmosphere almost directly over Columbus, Ohio. It was visible from 14 U.S. States. Image captured Sept. 27, 2013. Credit: NASA MSFC View full size image
The bright event amazed people who happened to be watching from the ground. As of Sept. 28, the American Meteor Society received more than 450 reports of the fireball sighting with more than 400 still yet to be reviewed. "It was the most brilliant fireball that I have ever seen," Angela McClain told Spaceweather.com. "The entire landscape lit up. I spun around and there it was, a huge, bright green light, streaking across the sky. Even when it was gone, there was still a bright line in the sky about 20 seconds later. We were all stunned." Friday's fireball may not have been the only major meteoroid event witnessed in the Midwest last week. On Sept. 26, the AMS got more than 730 reports of a separate fireball sighting in Ohio, Illinois, Kentucky, Missouri, Indiana and Wisconsin.
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Subject: Re: Meteor Impact & Fire Kills 2 In Ohio!