Joe Velaidum of Charlottetown on Prince Edward Island narrowly avoided a collision with an incoming meteorite at his home in July.
The space rock—recorded with visuals and sound—landed where the homeowner had been standing just minutes earlier ...
The source of the splotch was officially registered on Monday as the Charlottetown meteorite, named after the city on Prince Edward Island, in eastern Canada, where it landed. Only 69 meteorites ...
Curious about the dust the homeowners checked the video footage from their security camera and saw an astounding moment - a rock that appeared to be a meteorite falling from space and crash ...
Even in Herd’s line of work, incidents like the meteorite strike in Prince Edward Island — Canada’s smallest province that lies just north of Nova Scotia — almost never come up.
A sharp crash that sounds like glass shattering or ice cracking has been documented as likely the world's first audio recording of a meteorite crash. It came by chance from a doorbell camera, recorded ...
Joe Velaidum's home security camera captured the instant a meteorite smashed against his home's brick walkway. The video is thought to be the first recorded sound of a meteorite's direct impact.
Meteorite experts at the University of Alberta in Canada studied the video and the debris and said it is “likely the first and only time the sound of a meteorite hitting the Earth has been ...
Hunting for meteorites can be a high-octane race as private collectors and scientists go head-to-head, reveals a new book by ...