Reports of meteor streaking across Prairies
Last Updated: Friday, November 21, 2008 | 12:14 AM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Video
- YOUR VIDEO: Meteor footage captured by Alister Ling, equipment at University of Calgary (Runs: 0:07)
- Play: Real Media »
- Play: QuickTime »
- YOUR VIDEO: Meteor footage captured by Don Hladiuk (Runs: 0:34)
- Play: QuickTime »
- Play: Real Media »
External Links
(Note: CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window)
IN DEPTH: Meteors and Asteroids
- Tunguska: A century later, scientists are still piecing together the story of a meteor
- Canadian scientists unveil plans for asteroid-hunting satellite
- The lowdown on shooting stars
- Asteroids: 'Minor planets' can have major impact
- Quirks & Quarks: Looking back on Peru meteorite
News stories:
Andy Bartlett recorded this footage from a 10th-floor apartment in Edmonton on his digital camera. (Submitted by Andy Bartlett) A bright light lit up the sky around 5:30 MT Thursday evening in Western Canada, with people reporting sightings in Alberta and Saskatchewan.
People telephoned the CBC newsrooms in Edmonton and Calgary to talk about what they saw.
"It was a really big flash, lit up the sky, and there was this huge, flaming fireball falling from the sky," said Rowyn Windsor, 12, who lives on the Canadian Forces base in Cold Lake, Alta., about 350 kilometres northeast of Edmonton.
"This huge light in our kitchen window lit up our whole kitchen," said Sabrina Schneider, who lives just outside Lloydminster on the Saskatchewan-Alberta border. "It kinda flashed a couple of times. It was really bright. It was a different light than lightning.
"We weren't really sure what happened ... got up to look out the window, and all of a sudden, we heard this rumbling."
Schneider said her sister saw the meteor while she was driving past North Battleford, Sask.
Torey Van Vam was driving north from Redcliff, Alta., outside Medicine Hat when he saw a bright white streak.
"As it got closer to the ground, it was more visible as a ball of white light with green around it. And as it got really close to the ground, it turned kind of orange, and I'm pretty sure it went straight to the ground," he said.
Footage captured by Alister Ling using equipment at the University of Calgary shows a flash in the sky. (CBC) Bev Ully, who lives on a farm near Unity, Sask., was watching TV when she saw a light through her west-facing living room window.
"It was just like there were headlights right outside the window and that something was moving. It wasn't just one big, bright flash. It was several flashes," she said.
Ully said her daughter in Brooks, in southern Alberta, had told her she had seen the light as well.
The fireball was also visible in Edmonton. Kim Wingrove was driving in the city's west end when he saw something in the sky.
"I saw this large orb shoot across in an east-southeast direction, on a very steady trajectory," he said. "It was very, very big. And I've seen a lot of shooting stars from all the world as I travelled, but I've never seen one so large. It was very bright yellow, with hints of green in it. It stayed in the air ... for about two to two and a half seconds."
Alister Ling, an Edmonton-area amateur astronomer who is a member of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, recorded the fireball using equipment from Alan Hildebrand, a meteorite researcher at the University of Calgary.
"When it flares out on the tape, you can see there's several of these multiple flashes, and that's when it's probably partly blowing up, which is also a really good indicator … that there's multiple stones that have come down," he said.
He said anyone who sees a fireball with their own eyes has a hard time judging where it came down, because fireballs stop glowing when they are 50 kilometres above the earth.
Ling said he will be consulting with other astronomers in Alberta, who will look at tapes from a local network of cameras and assess eyewitness reports to try and figure out where the fireball may have landed.
Although its early in the process, he thinks it may have fallen somewhere in central Alberta, and there could be search parties out looking for chunks as early as this weekend.
"Who knows," he said. "We might be really, really lucky."
With files from the Canadian PressShare Tools
Top News Headlines
- SpaceX capsule nears space station for historic docking
- The privately bankrolled Dragon capsule approaches the International Space Station for a historic docking after sailing through a practice rendezvous the day before. more »
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed
- The Conservative Party has filed a second motion to dismiss the robocalls lawsuits filed by the left-leaning Council of Canadians, calling council chairperson Maude Barlow a "virulent critic" of Prime Minister Stephen Harper who has "orchestrated" the litigation. more »
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- Raw stories about bullying emerged when a video booth was set up inside a Quebec high school. more »
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest

- The difficulty, danger and expense of removing the bodies of climbers who died in Mount Everest's "death zone" mean most of the dead remain on the mountain as a stark reminder to other climbers of the risks. more »
Latest Technology & Science News Headlines
- Facebook unveils camera app for iPhone
- Facebook unveiled a photo-sharing application on Thursday that allows users to take pictures on their mobile device and post them directly to their Facebook accounts. more »
- Neil Armstrong grants rare interview to accountants organization
- Legendary astronaut Neil Armstrong, who was the first person to walk on the moon, has surprised the media establishment by granting a rare and comprehensive interview to an unexpected interviewer: the Certified Practicing Accountants of Australia. more »
- 'Safe' stem cell discovery unveiled in Calgary
- Scientists in Calgary say they have discovered a way to create stem cells by the millions more quickly and safely than ever before. more »
- Canadian Hurricane Centre predicts 9 to 15 storms in 2012
- The early arrival of a tropical storm off the U.S. east coast does not mean Eastern Canada should brace for a particularly active hurricane season, Canadian forecasters said Thursday. more »
Bob McDonald's Blog
Underground lab may solve cosmic mystery May. 18, 2012 4:22 PM A new astronomical observatory opened this week - one more than 2 kilometres below the ground in Sudbury, Ont. - that may finally answer the mystery of Dark Matter in the universe. SNOLAB will attempt to capture the elusive Dark Matter particles as they pass right through the Earth.
Quirks & Quarks
- May 26: Before the Lights Go Out May. 24, 2012 10:14 AM A new book, "Before the Lights Go Out: Conquering the Energy Crisis Before It Conquers Us", suggests that the unpredictable, unplanned, ad-hoc way our energy use developed in the past will shape our energy future.
Latest Features
- Reclaiming the dead on Mt. Everest
- Workers' EI history to affect claim under new rules
- New mom among dead in Aylmer triple stabbing
- Gatineau police to question suspect in multiple homicides
- Conservatives move again to have robocalls suits tossed
- Quebec faces mounting pressure amid student crisis
- Suspect arrested in decades old N.Y. missing boy case
- Teens share bullying tales in confession booth
- B.C. man fined $6,000 for feeding 'pot bears'

