The "plotting" thickens....

I have finished plotting the bearings from the fireball reports where bearings 
noted including correcting transcription typos. So witness locations have 
azimuth legs projected over the ground and one can see where they tend to 
overlap. In Google Earth you can turn off the lines you wish by deselecting the 
box by the file name. Track names in this case correspond to the AMS log for 
event 371 a,b,c,and so on to t.

We now have a well documented photo through a telescope in Freeland, MD thanks 
to Mike Hankey which can be viewed at <http://www.mikesastrophotos.com/> who 
happened to be taking a timed exposure of known objects. The derived Az and El 
for the track of the fireball from this location is AZ 73°, AL 63½°, and had a 
bearing toward the east-northeast horizon courtesy of Kelly Beatty at Sky and 
Telescope(TM).  We also await the specifics from a security camera in York, Pa 
in order to generate another precise azimuth. 

Some reports still do not fit the over all data and frankly there are 
information snipets a float which give credence for up to 4 different 
trajectories/ground tracks.  One which is emerging as the new leader is one 
which carried the fireball towards York, PA but we still can't make a statement 
if the it passed East, West or Over York.  That is to say that it is looking 
less likely that there was a direct East to West trajectory parallel to the 
PA/MD State Line and ending over Maryland as I previously estimated.  

Someone will announce when they have been uploaded to a website or if you need 
it tonight email me off list.

Again this is a collection of reports that have been graphically rendered to 
make them easier to evaluate. They were released to give a consolidated overlay 
on a map.  I placed a straight edge along the margins and looked for possible 
tracks where reports agreed--That is where two adjacent witness locations 
agreed that the fireball passed between them.

A final note on understanding elevations.  Generally the closer you are to a 
fireball's path the higher in the sky it will be. Those reports with low 
elevations tend to be at a much greater distance.

Regards,
Elton
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