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Fireball sighted over Pacific Northwest

Flaming object in night sky probably meteor

08:08 PM PST on Sunday, March 13, 2005

By kgw.com and AP Staff

A fireball streaked through the night sky across the western half of the Pacific Northwest on Saturday night, startling people all the way from the southern Oregon coast to Canada.

KGW photo

A finger points to a flash in the sky that was captured on home video in Talent, Ore.

Residents across the Northwest reported seeing the bright streak of light as it flashed across the sky. The flash lasted up to five seconds, and was captured on home video by a witness in Talent, Ore.

Scientists said the flaming object was probably a meteor, and that it likely disintegrated before any fragments fell into the Pacific Ocean.

That conclusion by scientists matches the observations of Daisy Fisher. The Siletz, Ore. woman was driving her truck toward Newport along the coast when she saw the streaking object in the sky above the intersection of Highway 20 and Highway 101.

"The fireball was a red-orange color and falling rather slowly and sparking off into smaller pieces then burning out. It looked like it went down into the ocean," she told kgw.com. "It was amazing! Unlike anything I have ever seen."

Summer Jensen said she was sitting in her living room with her father when she saw the flash of light outside her Portland home and rushed to see what it was.

"I've never seen anything like that," echoed Jensen, who like Fisher said that the object appeared to be moving slowly.

"It was like a big ball of fire," and "behind it was a trail of blue," Jensen said.

Alex Benenson of Salem was driving south along Interstate-5, about halfway between Albany and Eugene, when he noticed the fireball.

"It was bright green leaving a trail of golden sparks, and as it faded it broke up into several smaller parts," he said in an e-mail to kgw.com.

T. Stabler of Clatskanie described it as "a perfectly round green object with an orange comet-like tail," while Andi Nounou of Camas, Wash., told kgw.com that the "fiery object - green in color tone with sparkling tail" looked "like a firework."

Michael O'Connor, a duty officer at the Federal Aviation Administration's regional office in Renton, Wash., said he fielded "a whole ton of calls" from people reporting they had seen a bright streak across the sky shortly before 8 p.m.

He said police, pilots and some air traffic controllers described it as "a green ball of fire with a long tail."

O'Connor said reports came from as far east as the Tri-Cities area in Washington.

"It appears to have come down over the ocean," said Dick Pugh of the Cascadia Meteorite Laboratory in Portland. He said the object flew over the Pacific Coast, streaking along from south to north.

Melinda Hutson, another expert at the lab, said meteors large enough to turn into fireballs are uncommon.

To get a fireball, it has to be "a big piece of rock or metal — most are pieces of asteroids. Once every once in a while a piece of the moon or Mars breaks off," she said.

Astronomer Jim Todd, planetarium director at the Oregon Museum of Science and Industry, said that if the meteor had entered the atmosphere during the daytime, it may not even have been noticed.

"It creates a bright contrast against the night sky," Todd said.

Last year, a meteor that appeared like a fireball was sighted over western Washington state.

On March 27, 2003, residents in four Midwestern states also reported seeing a disintegrating meteorite flash across the sky. More than 100 chunks of rock believed to be the remains of that meteor rained down on houses, puncturing roofs and destroying landscaping in Park Forest, Illinois, a suburb south of Chicago. No one was injured.

The last time a meteor was reported striking anything on the ground in Oregon -- becoming a meteorite -- was in May 1981.