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Home / Northern Advocate

Watch: Stunning meteor lets off boom, lights up New Zealand skies

Heath Moore
By Heath Moore
NZ Herald·
22 May, 2019 06:16 AM3 mins to read

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Kiwis, Aussies treated to glowing meteor sighting overnight. / ABC

Kiwis and Australians witnessed a short but stunning light show in our skies this morning as a meteor burnt up in the atmosphere just after midnight.

At around 12.25am Northlanders were woken to a flight of light, a deep rumbling and a flash of colour flying off the burning meteor.

Locals took to social media to describe what they saw and heard, with many revealing they thought it was a supersonic aircraft.

"It was a meteor. I saw it really close overhead at Oromahoe shortly after midnight. I could see green, yellow, orange flames coming off the rock as it burnt up," described one Northlander.

"It was very close and incredibly bright and afterwards there was a long rumbling sound. It was certainly bright enough to be seen at Paihia and Kaikohe."

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Kiwis and Australians witnessed a short but stunning light show as a meteor burnt up in the atmosphere just after midnight. Photo / ABC
Kiwis and Australians witnessed a short but stunning light show as a meteor burnt up in the atmosphere just after midnight. Photo / ABC

Another described the glowing meteor like the ending of a firework in the sky.

"I saw it driving north just south of Mangamuka - brilliant bright white light bursting out of the darkness and then a falling showing of flames and sparks as it fell - awesome."

Others said the rumbling was so loud it woke up animals.

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"I heard and felt that up at Kerikeri. The sound was travelling north and woke the neighbourhood critters. There was a massive flash."

Suddenly a flash of light lit up the night sky across New Zealand and Australia. Photo / ABC
Suddenly a flash of light lit up the night sky across New Zealand and Australia. Photo / ABC

For some, windows shook.

"I heard the rumble and a big bang. The windows shook. it sounded like a supersonic aircraft."

Another added: "We are in Cable Bay, the light travelled north and shortly afterwards there was a low rumbling noise that lasted a good 30 seconds. spooky! perhaps E.T has come back for round 2?"

Weatherwatch confirmed to the Herald they had had a large spike in reported meteor sightings, explaining it is rare to see a meteor across both New Zealand and Australia at the same time.

A Weatherwatch spokesperson says while they don't yet know a lot about last night's meteor, he believes it must have coming in on a slow burn or low angle of attack, skimming across a long distance of the atmosphere in seconds and seen by Australians and New Zealanders.

Australians also reported seeing the meteor light up their skies, with NSW and Victorian residents noticing a large flash around 10.20pm, the same time (12.20am NZT) Kiwis spotted it in New Zealand.

Experts from Australia described the meteor as a "fireball".

"It's pretty obvious that it's a meteor," astronomer David Findlay from the Australia Meteor Report group said.

"It's a small asteroid that's created this and has started to vaporise over the skies of South Australia.

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"From every indication so far, the bits of dashcam footage coming, and importantly, the reports of a sonic boom, all those are evidence that lead us to believe that this may have survived to the ground."

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