Hier das Video von einem Meteoreinschlag in Kanada. Man erwartet geradezu das Teenagerpärchen, das sich die Sache unbedingt näher anschauen muss und dann an der Einschlagstelle ein UFO oder ein Alien oder ein Monster oder den Blob oder alles zusammen vorfindet Verwandte Artikel:Die Alien WG auf Schwäbisch Ist ein Fan-Video, also diese Szene mein ich kommt so...Apple Mac Music Video Erst gestern hatten wir das Jed’s Other Poem (Beautiful Ground)...Bush bei den UK Music Video Awards 2008 Am letzten Dienstag wurden in London die UK Video Music...
This video was taken from a police cruiser dashboard camera. The meteor was so brolic is made the sky look like it was morning for a quick second or so. People must have been buggin out!
A meteor in Edmonton, Canada was caught on tape by a police dash camera. I'm not sure if this is for real, but it looks really cool! more about "Meteor caught on tape!", posted with vodpod
Scientists are today searching for remnants of a meteor that brilliantly lit up the sky in western Canada before breaking into pieces. Alan Hildebrand, a University of Calgary planetary scientist, called it one of the largest meteors visible in the country in the last decade. Video images showed what appeared to be a speeding fireball over Saskatoon which became larger and brighter before disappearing as it neared the ground. Mr Hildebrand said that he received about 300 e-mail reports from witnesses to the event. “It would be something like a billion-watt light bulb,” said Mr Hildebrand, who also co-ordinates meteor sightings with the Canadian Space Agency. Tammy Evans was woken up by her 10-year-old daughter who ran into the bedroom of their home in North Battleford, Saskatchewan, last Thursday. “She said there was a flash of light, the house shook twice and it sounded like dinosaurs were walking,” Ms Evans, a nurse, said. Mr Hildebrand said he suspected that the meteor had broken up into pieces and added that he planned to investigate an area around Macklin, Saskatchewan, near the Alberta border. Rick Huziak, an amateur astronomer in Saskatoon, helped to operate a camera on top of the University of Saskatchewan physics building that captured video of the meteor. “It was quite spectacular. The ground lights up all over the place,” he said. Huziak said most meteors burn up completely after entering the Earth’s atmosphere, but one in a thousand actually drop meteorites that hit the ground. The biggest meteorite fall occurred north east of Edmonton, Canada, near the town of Bruderheim in 1960. More than 700 fragments were recovered that totalled 300kg. Source