http://www.cloudbait.com/science/fireball20040111.html

January 11, 2004 Fireball
Cloudbait Observatory
Guffey, Colorado

This slow, bright meteor was seen by residents of Colorado at 7:05 PM. 
It was also caught on two of the DMNS Allsky Network cameras. 175
witness reports have been received as of January 20 (small black 
squares on the map below).

The initial information suggests that this fireball began south of 
Rifle, Colorado, and traveled eastward just south of I-70, ending over 
Aurora, a Denver suburb. The total path length was about 155 miles, and 
the speed was about 10.5 miles per second. The fireball was traveling in 
a level path at a height of about 44 miles. The radiant was probably in 
Aquarius. Meteorites may have dropped in the area around the Buckley Air 
National Guard station. Residents should be alert for rocks with a fresh 
black crust, or for signs of recently disturbed dirt, possibly resembling a 
small animal burrow.

This fireball is particularly interesting because of its date. Many 
witnesses reported similar fireballs on January 11 of 1998 and 2001. DMNS 
Allsky cameras also recorded bright fireballs on this date in 2002 and 2003.

[Map]

[Image]

This is an image of the fireball from the Guffey School allsky camera. The 
meteor begins at the left, and travels nearly a quarter of the way across 
the sky, almost parallel to the horizon. The gaps in the trail are an 
artifact of the camera that made the image. Because the event was so long 
(12.5 seconds) the camera had to periodically stop and save the image, and 
those breaks show up as gaps in the trail. A 384 KB animated GIF of this 
fireball can be seen here.  If you saw the fireball and have not made a 
report, please do so here: 

http://www.cloudbait.com/science/fireballs.html

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