
Courtesy NBC News
South Floridians who happened to be looking in the right place
at the right time Sunday night saw one spectacular light show – possibly a
sporadic meteor.
The Coast Guard began getting flooded with phone calls about
7:30 p.m., with reports of folks seeing flare-like objects from Jacksonville to
Key West, according to Coast Guard Petty Officer 3rd Class Sabrina
Laberdesque.
People called in, describing the flares "as orange or red
fireballs in the sky," Laberdesque said. The display was limited to the sky: No
injuries were reported, Laberdesque said.
A sporadic
meteor is basically a rocky object that comes from the asteroid belt, said Mike
Hankey, operations manager for the American Meteor Society, based in Genesee,
N.Y. The group logged 27 reports within about the first two hours of the event,
he said.
"This is a lot of reports to come in quickly," Hankey
said.
Gauging by the reports, it happened somewhere over the
ocean.
"These fireballs are common," Hankey said. "It's rare for any
one person to see one more than once or twice in their lifetime. But on any
given night, it might happen somewhere in the globe a few times in a day."
Hankey added: "People should not be scared of the sky falling
or anything at all."
Amanda Mayer, of West Palm Beach, said she saw something in
the sky and said she thought it was somebody flashing a light. She said she hit
record on her camera.
"I was like, 'Wow! That's weird," Mayer said. "I just started
videotaping, and that's when it happened."
It turned out to be good timing: The ball of light appeared as she recorded,
she said.
"I was pretty sure it was a meteor because of everything else
that's been happening," Mayer said.
The Coast Guard said it had suspected Sunday's sighting was a
meteor shower, but Hankey disagreed. "Meteor showers usually are much dimmer and
faster moving," Hankey said.
After a meteor exploded overhead near Chelyabinsk, Russia,
on Friday, reportedly injuring more than 1,000 people, many people elsewhere
in the world have wrongly thought that streaks they've seen in the sky,
including planes, are meteors, Hankey said.
"We're getting a lot more false reports," Hankey said.
But with false reports, the group tends to receive only one
report describing an incident, Hankey said. If the same event is reported over
and over in five or 10 minutes, then that's more likely to be "a legitimate
event," or sporadic meteor, Hankey said.
In South Florida Sunday night, the Coast Guard found that the
light streak vanished in an instant. The Coast Guard sent out a helicopter to
check out a report of a flare near the MacArthur Causeway in Miami, but found
nothing there, Laberdesque said.