A flash in the sky quickly turned into a startling reality for residents across the Houston area, as a meteor streaked overhead and left debris scattered across multiple neighborhoods.
According to the New York Post, on Saturday afternoon, a blazing fireball tore through the atmosphere at roughly 35,000 miles per hour, according to NASA.
Within seconds, the object fragmented, with one piece — measuring about three feet long — breaking away roughly 29 miles above Bammel, Texas.
That breakup created “a pressure wave that caused booms heard by some in the area,” NASA said.
The sonic disturbance sent confusion rippling across nearby communities. Some residents believed an explosion had occurred, prompting emergency calls.
The Brenham Fire Department even responded to a report along Highway 50, but crews found no immediate signs of damage or danger.
Witnesses described a dramatic scene unfolding overhead.
Several drivers reported seeing a “green flash fall from the sky, black smoke, and heard a loud ‘boom,’” adding to the uncertainty about what had just happened.
NASA later confirmed that meteorites — fragments that survive the fall to Earth — were scattered between the neighborhoods of Willowbrook and Northgate Crossing, an area spanning roughly 20 miles.
In one case, the cosmic event left a direct mark on a home.
A chunk about the size of a football punched through the roof of a house in Ponderosa Forest, about 20 miles outside Houston.
Inside, homeowner Sherrie James discovered an “unusual rock” near a hole that extended through both her ceiling and floor.
With no nearby construction or falling debris to explain the damage, authorities quickly linked the object to the meteor event.
The American Meteor Society later logged more than 100 reports from witnesses who saw the fireball blaze across the sky.
The Houston-area incident follows another recent event, in which a meteor exploded over Ohio, producing a sonic boom that was reportedly heard as far away as New York — a reminder of how quickly space debris can turn into a spectacle, or even a close call, here on Earth.













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