Joe Velaidum of Charlottetown on Prince Edward Island narrowly avoided a collision with an incoming meteorite at his home in July.
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 ...
A meteorite hurtling at over 125 mph (201.17 km/h) narrowly avoided striking a Canadian homeowner, creating an extraordinary scene captured on video. The event, which took place in Charlottetown, ...
— 'Rare daylight fireball' meteor over NYC created loud boom near Statue of Liberty ...
Chris Herd, science professor and curator of the university's meteorite collection ... is an "ordinary" chondrite, a stony meteorite containing small mineral granules, with features that help ...
The University of Alberta's meteorite collection curator ... the most common type of stony meteorite found on Earth, accounting for about 86 percent of all space rocks recovered.