http://deseretnews.com/dn/view/0,1249,515039379,00.html

Meteor causes stir in Utah on Thursday 
Desert News (Utah)
October 17, 2003

A meteor passing over Utah Thursday morning caused a stir among skywatchers as the
unusual occurrence moved across the sky toward the West, leaving a bright light.

Patrick Wiggins, NASA solar system ambassador for Utah, said someone e-mailed a 
photo to him showing a bright light with an ionized tail moving across the sky 
at about 8 a.m. "Someone also said a meteor went across at about 10 a.m., so I 
don't know if there was one meteor or two," Wiggins said.

Daytime meteors, he said, are not all that rare, but do happen occasionally. 
"I've never seen one. It's only occasionally they are bright enough to see 
during the day."

Wiggins said Thursday's meteor looked like "what you'd expect to see a comet 
look like at night, whitish with a bright tail against a blue sky. Meteors at 
night tend to have a train - ionized stuff behind it - that is lit up in the 
daylight."

An Army National Guard employee at Camp Williams saw a bright object moving 
across the sky approximately the same time as the meteor was reported and 
thought it was an airplane in distress, National Guard spokesman Lt. Col. Brad 
Blackner said.

Soldiers searched the area for a possible downed airplane and
filed a report with the North American Air Defense Command,
which reported no aircraft missing, he said.

Wiggins said if a meteor had broken up over the Wasatch Front, it would have 
caused a sonic boom loud enough to be heard throughout the Salt Lake
Valley. 

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