[meteorite-list] NPA 03-24-1933: (Pasamonte) Meteor's Fall Described by Plane Pilots

MARK BOSTICK thebigcollector at msn.com
Sun Oct 31 10:34:34 EST 2004


Paper: Reno Gazette
City: Reno, Nevada
Date: Friday, March 24, 1933
Page: 1, continued on page 3

Meteor's Fall Described by Plane Pilots

Spectacular Sight Is Seen From Air Early This Morning

BY GEORGE W. SMITH
Associated Press Staff Writer

     KANSAS CITY, March 24 - (AP) - The flash of a brilliant meteor across 
the Texas-New Mexico skies this morning was described today by Bill Coyle, 
airmail pilot, as it appeared to him from what he termed "a ringside seat 
9500 feet above the earth."

EXTREMELY BRILLIANT

     "It was the most spectacular sight I even have witnessed," he said on 
his arrival here. "I find it difficult to translate into words. The meteor 
appeared out of the northeast traveling west by southwest. It was 5:15 a.m., 
mountain time and I was over Adrian, Texas, forty-five miles west of 
Amarillo.
     "The meteor first gave the appearance of a large flood light being 
turned on in the sky.  It increased in brilliance with extreme rapidity. In 
a second or so it grew too bright to look at.

AT SAME ALTITUDE

     "At first I thought it was coming straight for me. We were about the 
same altitude. In a moment I caught sight of its tail and could tell that it 
was going north of me.
     "Its line of flight was probably forty or fifty miles distance. At any 
rate it was so close, I could see fiery fragments of the meteor whirling 
away from it and dropping back into the tail.
     "Before it struck or disintegrated the meteor had lost altitude and I 
was looking down on its long, horizontal flight.

SIZE OF HANGER

     "It appeared to be about the size of our Wichita hanger and shaped like 
a ball.  It left a deep red trail with a bluish tint which hung in the sky 
until obliterated by daylight.
     "Besides the pieces which appeared to exploded into the tail, others 
exploded from the main mass and dropped to the ground so it was impossible 
to tell whether the meteor gradually disintegrated or struck the ground.
     "However, it ended from my view in what appeared to be the vicinity of 
"Tucumcari."

-------------------------

"GREAT BLUE LIGHT"

     LOS ANGELES, March 24. - (AP) - Frank Williams, transcontinental 
western air transport pilot arriving here, described his aerial view of the 
meteor which this morning flashed through Southwest skies.
     "At 5'10 mountain time this morning, I was fifty miles west of 
Albuquerque, N.M. when suddenly the whole sky because illuminated," he said 
"It seemed to turn the night into day as it some one had turned on a great 
blue electric light.

SEPARATE INTO CLOUDS

     "I turned and saw an object approaching with brilliance from the east.  
It was an enormous mass of blue light. It had no tail but seemed to be 
approaching me at a comparatively high altitude.
     "This brilliance kept coming westward I should say for about eight or 
ten seconds.  Then suddenly it seemed to go apart. I would not call it 
bursting.  It just seemed to dim and separate into a couple of clouds.  My 
estimate was that the object was about three hundred miles away from me.

TWO COLORS

     "One of the clouds was a very brilliant blue, as if within the center 
were some brilliant strong light.
     "The other cloud was flame colored, yellow colored.  These were two 
distinct clouds. In about fifteen minutes they seemed to merge with the 
intense blue illumination in the center and the "flame colored light on the 
outside fringes.
     "These clouds were in view for about half an hour, when they because 
lost behind intervening clouds of the night sky."

(end)


Clear Skies,
Mark Bostick
http://www.meteoritearticles.com

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