
A fireball crossed the sky over Spain last night at 22.10h and was picked up by the Sierra Nevada astronomic obervatory, La Sagra.
The Instituto de Astrofísica de Andalucía (IAA-CSIC), through its astronomic observatories on Sierra Nevada, in Sevilla and at La Hita (Toledo) picked up a fireball just past midnight on the 17th.
In the early hours of yesterday, a fireball streaked across the heavens above Spain, visible over most of the peninsula.
Early Sunday morning, just after midnight, saw a large fireball enter the Earth’s atmosphere, which momentarily lit up the sky.
Locals from Cogollos de Guadix were surprised when a fiery object hurtled through a roof. Luckily, the house is uninhabited.
Almuñécar had a Three Kings slightly out of the normal, registering a 2.5 earth tremor at less than a minute to 10 in the morning.
We’ve had three fireballs streaking over our heads in just one night, and none of them was Dave Darby on his new scooter.
The astronomic tracking station, La Hita (Toledo) picked up the passage of a spectacular fireball crossing Spain’s south-eastern skies yesterday.
At exactly 03.48h Monday morning, a fireball streaked across the Andalusian sky, whose entry was registered by the Hita Observatory (Toledo).
There was a fireball over the Costa Tropical around 03.27h on Friday the 9th, which became visible over the Med and streaked in over the province of Granada.