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NATIONAL BRIEFING / TEXAS

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Times Wire Reports

The fireball that streaked across the sky and alarmed numerous Texas residents was likely just a big meteor and not wreckage from colliding satellites, experts said.

Federal Aviation Administration spokesman Roland Herwig said the fireball seen across a wide stretch of the state Sunday morning probably was a natural phenomenon and not debris from last week’s collision between an Iridium communications satellite and a Russian military space vehicle.

Preston Starr, observatory manager at the University of North Texas, said it was probably a meteor about the size of a pickup with the consistency of a chunk of concrete.

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Starr said the object’s trajectory was wrong for it to have been satellite debris. And he said such objects would be too small and moving too slowly to produce a flare so widely visible during the day.

Starr said objects as large as his estimate for the one spotted Sunday enter the atmosphere about eight or 10 times a year.

It was probably moving between 15,000 and 40,000 mph, he said.

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