- B.C. Parks send teens to the top
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- Meteorite fell near Wynndel
- Huge meteorite crosses Cranbrook sky
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- A significant event in the night sky
- Celestial marvel
- Activity in the skies over Cranbrook
Meteor hunters, take note: we have learnt more about the possible location of meteor fragments.
A massive meteor flew over Cranbrook early on Saturday morning, briefly turning night to day and making houses shudder in Cranbrook.
Video taken by the College of the Rockies meteor cam seemed to show the meteor breaking up to Cranbrook's south west.
Dr. Alan Hildebrand of the Canadian Fireball Reporting Centre, after watching the video, guessed that meteor fragments may have fallen near the eastern shore of Kootenay Lake, north of Creston.
But an eye witness who saw the meteor over Canyon said that can't be right.
"If they're looking around the lake, they're looking in the wrong spot," said Esther Aylward, who was camping at Canyon Park on Friday night.
"I just happened to be up because I couldn't sleep and I saw it and it was behind Canyon Park, on the mountains on that side."
Because it was dark, Aylward said she couldn't tell if the meteor came down in front of or behind the mountain ranges to the east of Canyon, but it didn't cross overhead.
"I saw it for more than 30 seconds. It didn't seem to go anywhere. Maybe it went down behind the mountains, I'm not sure," she said. "It was just in one spot, burning up."
Eye witnesses elsewhere in the region described the fireball as being a greenish blue colour, but Aylward said when she saw it, the meteor was red and orange.
As it disappeared, she heard a loud boom.
"I didn't know what the hell I was seeing. I'm like, 'What the heck's going on?'"
Anyone who saw the meteor can report sightings at http://miac.uqac.ca
The rare footage taken by the College of the Rockies meteor cam can be seen at www.facebook.com/TownsmanBulletin










