- From the Hollywood Hills to the Nevada state line, people
reported seeing a fireball streaking across the sky and appearing to fall
toward the San Bernardino Mountains on Tuesday morning. But explanations
of the mysterious object were scarce.
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- San Bernardino County Fire Dispatch reported receiving
dozens of calls related to a fireball moving at high speed in the northwest
sky around 10:40 a.m.
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- "We got quite a few reports. It started with a gentlemen
in the Lake Arrowhead area reporting a fireball in the Meadow Bay area,
and then we started getting calls from all over," said San Bernardino
County dispatch supervisor Tom Barnes.
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- "Fire crews in Barstow and on I-15 near Stateline
came up on the radio and reported an object in the sky moving very fast
across the northern sky and described it as yellowish green in color with
streaks of debris. It looked like it burned up before it hit the ground."
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- Barnes said the department has "basically determined
it was most likely not an aircraft and was probably man-made or a meteor
entering the Earth's atmosphere."
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- Meteors are small rocky fragments of other planetary
bodies that fall toward Earth. Meteorites are what strikes the ground.
Asteroids are larger meteors.
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- A fireball is one of a common class of meteor, denoting
a bright, streaming orb. Fireballs decelerate from 60,000 mph to 200 mph
during their journeys, often burning up before they fall to Earth.
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- Studies have indicated that about 25 meteorites weighing
more than a fifth of a pound fall on an area the size of California annually.
Caltech experts say about 300 to 400 larger meteorites fell on California
during the last century.
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- "Events like this do happen around the world. But
a bright meteor is not something people would usually recognize in the
day," said Lance Benner, a research scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in La Cañada Flintridge. "The eyewitness account
suggests it was a small asteroid hitting the atmosphere."
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- The fact that it was spotted in daylight suggests it
could have been farther away than it appeared, Benner said. He said it
could have landed several hundred miles away.
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- Benner said he knows of a case in which a fireball seen
in Pennsylvania ended up landing in New York state in 1992.
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- Benner said it was unlikely any radar system picked it
up.
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- However, it may have been caught by security cameras
at gas stations or other outdoor facilities whose vantage point has the
sky as backdrop, he said.
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- John Haire, chief of media relations for Edwards Air
Force Base, said the base had no test flights at the time of the sightings.
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- "I think some people have been watching too much
'X-Files,' " he said, referring to the popular show about FBI agents
investigating phenomena with no conventional explanation.
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- Most of the reports came from Riverside and San Bernardino
counties, but a few people said they saw the fireball as far west as the
Hollywood Hills.
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- Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Ian Gregor
said the FAA received no reports of any missing or downed aircraft and
the military had not informed the agency of any problems with aircraft
or missiles.
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- The Barstow Fire Protection District dispatched firefighters
near the town of Calico, but found no evidence of a meteorite or anything
else hitting the ground, officials said.
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- Rimoftheworld.net, which covers the San Bernardino Mountains
area, reported overhearing a fire attack plane relaying that it had detected
an emergency beacon near Butler Peak in the Big Bear area.
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- But no signs of a downed aircraft were found.
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- richard.winton@latimes.com
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