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Re: (meteorobs) FM meteor Train heard



COULD THIS BE RELATED TO THE FIREBALL WITH SONIC BOOM
REPORTED EARLY WEDNESDAY IN CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA??

See newswire at end of the message below:

> ------------------------------
> Date: Wed, 27 Dec 2000 16:16:35 +1100
> From: "Geoff Wolfe" <dxer3@hotmail.com>
> Subject: (meteorobs) FM meteor Train heard
> 
> Heard a great train which lasted for 1:10min on the
> 26/12/00 at 19:20 UTC on 
> 98.5 Mhz (ABC Classic FM from Maryborough QLD). 
> The train also brought in reception on TV channel's 
> 0, 1 & 2 (on my scanner) from the state of 
> Queensland (QLD). 
> Meteor activity has been very low of late with rates
 
> being below 20 - 30 per hour (which is poor for FM -
> Average is around 50 - 60 per hour).
> - - Geoff <Cooma NSW Australia>
>
_______________________________________________________


December 27 , 2000   
Night Sky Boom Rattles Australians, Baffles Police 


SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australian authorities were baffled
on Wednesday by overnight reports of bright lights and
booming noises in the sky which shook some houses and
prompted fears of falling space junk or meteorites.

Police said they received numerous reports of
``explosions in the sky, sonic boom-type noises and
flare-type lights'' over a two hour period on Tuesday
night from residents along a 124 mile stretch of the
country's east coast.

``There was a huge bang which shook my house,'' one
resident of Bateman's Bay, 177 miles south of Sydney,
told Australian Broadcasting Corp radio.

``I thought the house next door had blown up,'' he
said.

Police said they had contacted meteorology, air
safety, emergency, and defense experts, but were
unable to come up with any official reason behind the
unusual night sky action.

A number of small grass fires were also sparked around
the nearby capital of Canberra at about the same time,
they said.

``No debris has been found,'' a police spokesman told
Reuters.

The noise and lights prompted fears the accident prone
Mir Space station could be making an uncontrolled
return to earth after Russian space officials lost
contact with the 130-ton craft for 24 hours until late
on Tuesday.

The craft, which remains safe in orbit, is to be
dumped in the Pacific Ocean, 900 to 1,200 miles off
Australia, in late February.

Australia's Deep Space Communications Complex said a
small meteorite was the most likely explanation for
the sightings.

``That would cause a sonic boom and would also cause
some good flares around it,'' operations supervisor
Ian Warren told domestic news agency Australian
Associated Press. 
 




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