Fragments of the big meteorite that lit up the Canadian skies across the provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan last week have been found, according to a report in CBC online. University of Calgary scientists said they located several meteorite fragments late Thursday afternoon, and they were planning to take reporters to the site Friday. Planetary scientist Dr. Alan Hildebrand and graduate student Ellen Milley believe thousands of meteorite bits from the 10-ton bolide are strewn over a 20-square-kilometre area. The video above of the fireball was taken by a video camera in a police car in Edmonton, Alberta.
The exact site of the findings hasn’t yet been disclosed, but is said to be south of the community of Lloydminster on the Alberta-Saskatchewan border. Thousands of people saw the meteor streak across the sky and explode on November 20. It was also captured by numerous surveillance video cameras and a few amateur photographers who happened to have a camera in their hands at the right time. Hildebrand called it one of the largest meteors visible in the country in the last decade.
Source: CBC, via Bad Astronomy
Don Pettit is one of the astronauts currently on board the International Space Station. He's…
We’ve already seen the success of the Ingenuity probe on Mars. The first aircraft to…
Since the discovery of the first exoplanet in 1992, thousands more have been discovered. 40…
Even if you knew nothing about astronomy, you'd understand that exploding stars are forceful and…
It seems that we are completely alone in the universe. But simple reasoning suggests that…
When it comes to our modern society and the many crises we face, there is…