I just spoke to Waco news and of course, they know it is satellite debris. They 
were not interested in hearing the fact that it was a meteorite. 
Media has this one all messed up.
Something large came down in Texas today. Will be on a plane in the morning if 
something is found.
Michael Farmer

Sent from my iPhone
Michael 


On Feb 15, 2009, at 8:45 PM, Mr EMan <[email protected]> wrote:



I believe I've run to ground the space debris/ satellite collision/ Fireball 
confusion but see no way to get it back into Pandora's Box. What happens on the 
Internet stays in the Internet!

A Notice to AIRMEM(NOTAM) was issued for the expected re-entry of an ISS 
resupply rocket booster over Alberta Canada for approx 3-3:15 PM Friday 13 Feb. 
NOTAMS are national/international for aircraft flying into the affected region. 
 This booster was on time but skipped back and finally reentered over the South 
Atlantic off the West coast of Africa 15 min later.  The NOTAM did not 
immediately expire I forget how long NOTAMs remain in effect.

A reporter called the FAA who called the National Weather Service or vice versa 
regarding a fireball over Kentucky and some mal-informed representative sees 
the Alberta NOTAM all the while reports of a satellite collision are still 
creeping across the CNN screen and connects the wrong two plus two.

It is picked up by the news wire and suddenly the sky is falling everywhere as 
parts of the Iridium and Kosmos suddenly start dropping straight down from 
orbit Wiley Coyote/Hollywood style--Oh yeah and starting barn fires in Lily 
Kentucky which never stop burning and can't be extinguished. DUH!

Back to a general note: we are seeing weekly and monthly spaced major fireballs 
including large meteorite falls. Statistics tell me that we are only sampling a 
portion of a much larger asteroidal debris field in crossing earth orbit.  Is 
anyone aware of a more formal study accessing a distant collision in the 
asteroid belt that has sent a fresh supply of material our way?  I surmised a 
few years ago that Feb also seemed to have a cluster of falls toward the end of 
the month.  Has anyone on the list looked at the fall log or fireball log at 
Amsmeteors.org for any recurring clusters?  Be back later, I am finishing my 
Kevlar titanium umbrella hard hat.

Elton
--- On Sun, 2/15/09, Dark Matter <[email protected]> wrote:

From: Dark Matter <[email protected]>
Subject: [meteorite-list] looks promising...for something
To: "Meteorite List" <[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, February 15, 2009, 9:44 PM
Texans report fireball in sky, sonic booms

-Video shot in Austin, Texas, shows meteor-like object in
sky Sunday morning
-Fireball sightings, reports of sonic booms come days after
satellite
collision in space
-FAA told U.S. pilots to watch for "falling space
debris"
-No reports of ground strikes or interference with
aircraft, FAA spokesman says

(CNN) -- Sonic booms and at least one fireball in the sky
were
reported in Texas on Sunday, less than a week after two
satellites
collided in space and a day after the Federal Aviation
Administration
asked U.S. pilots to watch for "falling space
debris," authorities
said.

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/02/15/texas.sky.debris/index.html
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