As to how many fireballs  I know of 3 major ones in 36-48 hours over US and 
Canada this past weekend:Kentucky, Texas, Alberta(not the rocket booster) Now 
Göran reports another in Sweden Sunday. So that is 4 over civilization with an 
unknown number over water etc. Starting to look like a Hollywood plot.

The Texas daylight Fireball was caught on video tape and in many informed 
opinions conclude this could not have been space debris-- but that is the FAA's 
story and they are wearing it out till the holiday is over it seems. I see that 
the USAF has stepped up to refute the FAA's unfounded proclamation this was 
from the satellite collision aftermath.

No one has asked NASA's opinion. NASA is in shock for the time being shaking 
its head in disbelief, looking at a possibility that manned orbital stations 
will be too unsafe to for occupation--possibly killing the next generation of 
shuttles. Space Command is dodging blame as to who should have seen the Iridium 
33 and Kosomos satellites " trying to occupy the same very small point in space 
at the same very same time" to quote my old geometry teacher.

 We've also have 2 possibly 3 major meteorite falls around the world since late 
November and tens of fireballs reported since then. This is an unusual cluster 
of larger events which are usually spaced out more( no pun) but nothing yet 
suggests anything ominous but that might be changing as new data arrives.

I suspect the Canadian Meteorite and Impact Advisory Committee and, the less 
formally organized US equivalent, will be busy this week sorting out the 
fireball swarm after working on the implications of two major space powers 
allowing two large satellites to T-bone each other in what statistically should 
be in the million or billion to one range. This is the scariest part of last 
week in the "OOps I thought YOU were driving" chicken contest.

Elton
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