HOUSTON — Many of you saw the bright light of a meteor over parts of the Houston area Saturday afternoon. Others heard a loud boom. Now, one woman says a piece of it may have crashed into her home.
An asteroid weighing about 7 tons and traveling at 45,000 miles per hour zoomed over multiple states and lit up the sky as a meteor Tuesday morning, causing a loud boom that some residents mistook for ...
A seven-ton meteor was seen across the sky in some northeast states Tuesday. Dietitians say you shouldn't take these vitamins in the morning Iranian military mocks US for 'strategic failure' William ...
A 7-ton meteor fragmented over Cleveland, Ohio, producing meteorites and loud booms. NASA reported the fireball traveled at 45,000 mph, releasing energy equal to 250 tons of TNT. Witnesses across the ...
Cameras in the Pittsburgh area captured a bright meteor streaking across the sky on Tuesday morning. The National Weather Service's Pittsburgh office said it received reports from across western ...
A loud boom felt across northeast Ohio on Tuesday morning was caused by a meteor, meteorologists have confirmed. NASA confirmed on Tuesday that the loud boom was a result of a six-foot, 17,000-pound ...
People across Pennsylvania and Ohio were wondering what they saw streak across the sky and the loud boom that came with it on St. Patrick’s Day morning. Calls flowed into 911 centers in both states ...
People around northeast Ohio flooded Nexstar’s WJW newsroom with reports of what sounded like a “large explosion” that lasted several seconds just before 9 a.m., and caused homes and businesses to ...
CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — A 7-ton meteor that sped across the Cleveland sky at 45,000 miles (72,420 kilometers) per hour on Tuesday before breaking apart in a thunderous boom startled residents who ...
A thunderous boom heard and felt widely across northeastern Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning was likely the result of a meteor. The weather service in Cleveland, meanwhile, shared ...
A thunderous boom heard and felt widely across northeastern Ohio and parts of Pennsylvania on Tuesday morning was likely the result of a meteor. The Pittsburgh office of the National Weather Service ...