Whiskey lovers in Louisiana will love this bit of news, a popular flavor or brand of whiskey now comes in the form of ...
It wasn't an earthquake this time. The sky isn't falling either. Instead, it was a meteor that shares a name with the ...
The fireball, defined as a meteor brighter than the planet Venus, is estimated to have soared over New York City before traversing a short path southwest and disintegrating about 31 miles (50 ...
More than 40 people from New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland and Rhode Island reported they saw a very bright meteor, known as a fireball, streaking across the sky ...
Residents in parts of New York City and New Jersey were shaken by a loud boom Tuesday morning, with NASA officials saying it was likely due to a daylight fireball meteor. A daylight fireball is a ...
Whether $5 or $50, every contribution counts. At around 11.17am local eastern time, a fireball appears to have flown over Manhattan and then disintegrated in a fireball, the space agency said.
NASA said initial reports suggest the daylight fireball passed over the Statue of Liberty before moving west into New Jersey. Some people on social media reported a loud boom and wondered if there ...
There was likely nothing left over from the fireball, according to NASA. "The object producing the fireball was too small and too fast to have generated any meteorites," the space agency wrote on ...
The meteor created a rare daytime fireball that traveled west into New Jersey at speeds of up to 38,000 mph (61,000 km/h) according to NASA Meteor Watch. The American Meteor Society received ...
NASA Meteor Watch wrote that a "daylight fireball" passed over New York City at 11:17 a.m. "Local media are reporting the sighting of a fireball and booms and shakings between 10 AM and noon ...