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Likely meteor rattled residents in Ohio, Pennsylvania

By Thomson Reuters Mar 17, 2026 | 1:50 PM

By Rich McKay

March 17 (Reuters) – A kaboom, a fireball and white streaks in the skies over Pennsylvania and Ohio – seen as far as Virginia ​and Canada – were probably the signs of ‌a meteorite landing near Cleveland on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service and scientists.

Rattled residents dialed 911, and local emergency officials called the NWS wondering “what the heck?” at about ‌9 ​a.m. ET (1300 GMT), said Bill ⁠Modzelewski, an NWS meteorologist ⁠in Pittsburgh.

“We’re receiving reports across western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio of a loud boom and a fireball in the sky. Our satellite data suggest it was ​possibly a meteor entering the atmosphere,” the NWS posted online.

Laurence Garvie, a research professor and curator ⁠of the Buseck Center for Meteorite ⁠Studies at Arizona State University, said ​the likely landing spot was Medina, about 40 miles southwest ​of Cleveland, where meteorite hunters lucky enough to ‌locate the wreckage will likely find lots of little black rocks.

The booming sound was when the space object broke the sound barrier at a speed somewhere between ⁠25,000 and 160,000 miles per hour, according to Garvie. The American Meteor Society received more than 100 reports of ⁠sightings of the ‌fireball, according to the online site ⁠EarthSky.

“I’ve been getting calls and texts all ​morning. ‌This is very exciting for us,” Garvie ​said. “They may ⁠just look like black stones on the ground, but you can actually hold something older than the Earth. Something from outer space. And we can learn new things from them.”

(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta; editing ​by Donna Bryson)