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Giant Canadian Fireball Captured On Video
#1
Possible meteor lights up the skies in northern Alberta

at 22:11 on November 20, 2008, EDT.
By THE CANADIAN PRESS
 
EDMONTON - A possible meteor lit up both the sky and the telephone lines in Western Canada on Thursday evening.

Around 5:30 p.m., a huge flash of light briefly turned the dark skies into daylight. Reports of sightings of the light and possibly a fireball came from Edmonton to Regina to Swan River, Man. People got so excited that RCMP in Lloydminster, on the Alberta-Saskatchewan boundary, issued a news release asking people to stop calling them.

The excitement quickly spread to the scientific community, which was agog with the possibility the fireball might have dropped meteorites to the ground.

"Wow. That's impressive," said Chris Herd, associate professor of Earth and Atmospheric sciences at the University of Alberta, when told of the wide geographical swath of reports.

"To see something from that far away, that's pretty substantial. The potential is that it's big. That tells you that the meteoroid is probably a good size. There's a pretty high chance that it dropped meteorites."

He said that pinpointing the location of any meteorites depends on two factors - people calling in to say they've found such space rocks, and people calling to report how far afield the fireball was spotted.

"The more reports that you have into that fireball-reporting ... the more data you have and then people can reduce that data and try and pinpoint where it may have landed."

He said typically, meteorites fall within a radius of a few kilometres.

The source of the meteor can only be determined once the meteorites are examined, said Heard, who is also curator of a collection of meteorites at the Edmonton university.

"The vast majority of the meteorites that we have, we're fairly certain, come from the asteroid belt between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter."

Marcel Gobeil was on his acreage west of Beaumont, Alta., waiting for his wife to come home at the time.

"I just happened to look outside facing east," he said. "All of a sudden I saw this big flash coming down and I thought somebody was playing tricks on me, like fireworks behind the house or something.

"Just before that I heard a boom. I didn't know if it was a tree against the house. It was green and blue and it was coming down pretty fast."

Gobeil said the light display eventually turned orange, yellow and red and lasted 10 seconds.

"I was waiting for it to explode," he said. "It looked similar to when we watch (news reports) in Afghanistan. When I didn't see that, I said, 'well, that's something from outer space.' I'm sure it landed way out in Winnipeg or something."

Gobeil said he only wished he'd gotten a picture of the other-worldly event.

"It's exciting - both scary and really nice."
 
http://start.shaw.ca/start/enCA/News/Nat...20163A.xml 

Giant Canadian Fireball Captured On Video
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#2
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#3
Searchers find remains of fireball meteor

Fri Nov 28, 1:52 pm ET
 
VANCOUVER, British Columbia (Reuters) – Searchers have found the remains of a 10-ton meteor that produced a dramatic fireball in the skies over the Canadian Prairies this month, researchers said on Friday.

Thousands of meteorite fragments have been found densely strewn over a 20-square-kilometre (8 square mile) area south of the community of Lloydminster on the Alberta-Saskatchewan border, according to the University of Calgary.

Searchers have been scrambling to find the remains of the meteor since it streaked across the sky in the early evening of November 20, producing a fire ball that shone brightly enough to be seen over an area 700 km (435 miles) wide.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20081128/sc_n...tZw.YEtbAF
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#4
'Meteor Man' offers $10,000 for Canadian chunk

By Evan Pellegrino

Robert Haag, "The Meteor Man," who is offering bounty on Canada meteorite

A fireball that lit up the sky over western Canada two weeks ago has a Tucsonan offering a $10,000 bounty on what might be found.

People were out looking for remnants of the space rock before, but the bounty has spurred interest, said Grady Semmens, communications manager for the University of Calgary.

"A lot of people were out and about and saw it when it happened, which put into motion a large public interest and response," he said.

"It's unfolding still."

The excitement started on Nov. 20, when just after nightfall, the sky was illuminated over Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta by a meteor crashing into Earth's atmosphere. Reports of the flash were reported as far away as Montana, Semmens said.

Now a search is under way for fragments of the alien rock — and Tucsonan Robert Haag, who calls himself "The Meteor Man" and has chased space rocks for 30 years, is offering the cash reward for the first one-kilogram fragment — about 2.2 pounds — offered to him.

"It's a really great meteorite," Haag said Monday. "It's fresh and exciting, and that's why it's worth so much. But then again, they're all great to me."

Haag said that because of Canadian law, the meteorite will need to stay in Canada no matter who finds it, but that hasn't stopped him from putting up his price.

"It's a shooting star that fell, and it's my dream to follow it," he said.

Haag said he grew up around rocks and minerals, searching for them around Tucson and hanging out at his family's rock shop. He would like to see a large fragment of the meteorite brought here, but because of Canadian law, he predicts he will be forced resell or trade the space rock in that country — if he ever gets his hands on it.

"Maybe I can resell it for $12,000 or maybe just sell it back for $10,000 and have a Canadian adventure in the process. I want to be a part of the buzz. This is like Meteorite-stock," he said, comparing the excitement to that of Woodstock.

The Canadians agree it's exciting.

"It's dramatic," Semmens said. "Our lead researcher has said this is the largest public response he's seen in his career."

The meteorite exploded into thousands of fragments and only about 50 have been found, he said.

Most of the search area has been narrowed down to about 20 square kilometers —about 8 square miles — of valleys and mixed forests and prairies.

No one has contacted Haag yet, but people may want to think twice before heading up north in hopes of finding the meteorite and collecting the reward. Semmens said that the vast majority of fragments are already owned by someone, whether or not they know it.

Under another Canadian law, any piece of the meteorite found will belong to whoever owns the property where it landed, Semmens said. He said that although most fragments will be found on private property, he hopes many will be donated to the university for research.

"There has been constant searching going on from our university with permission from property owners, and we're working on putting together an official team later this week of about a dozen or 15 people, mostly students," Semmens said.

While out meteorite hunting on Sunday, Semmens himself found a 2-pound fragment — and the landowner has given permission to the university to hold onto the sample for research.

"The biggest fragment found so far was 30 pounds and about the size of a human head," Semmens said. "It's a good-size piece of rock."

That fragment was found by a local father and son who were out meteorite hunting. After contacting the University of Calgary, they gave the chunk up to the landowner where it was found, Semmens said.

"A fireball of this size happens about 10 times per year, but the vast majority happen in areas where there aren't people, like over oceans," Semmens said. "For it to happen in a populated area is quite rare."

Semmens said Haag's offer is the only reward he is aware of.

According to Semmens, public interest in finding a large chunk of the meteorite for a reward can be helpful to researchers.

"It gets people interested in finding it, and if they do, it could be used for scientific purpose," he said. "Also a general interest in science for people is a good thing, too."

Haag said he hopes someone will find a large fragment soon and offer it to him.

"It's doesn't mean it will leave science if it's sold to me," he said. "I might trade it or give it to scientists.

"Meteorites connect you to the Earth and to the sky," he said, adding that last month's fireball was the biggest and best Canada has seen in more than a decade.

"It's a blessing from heaven."

"It's a really great meteorite. It's fresh and exciting, and that's why it's worth so much. But then again, they're all great to me."

Robert Haag, "The Meteor Man," who is offering bounty on Canada meteorite

● Contact NASA Space Grant intern Evan Pellegrino at 573-4125 or at [email protected].

 http://www.azstarnet.com/metro/269743
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