CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) — A 7-ton meteor that sped across the Cleveland sky at 45,000 miles (72,420 kilometers) per hour on Tuesday before breaking apart in a thunderous boom startled residents who ...
Minecraft Challenger Logdotzip digs through the game's original code to execute the very first programmed instruction ever available to players. Shoppers alarmed by what's happening at malls: "Living ...
A "loud boom" heard in northeast Ohio on Tuesday, March 17 was likely the result of a meteor, the National Weather Service said. The agency's Pittsburgh office said a "fireball" was spotted in the sky ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A "boom" heard in Ohio and neighboring states on Tuesday morning appears to have been from a meteor, the National Weather Service ...
Could Hollywood really be onto something when it comes to the end of the world (like Don’t Look Up)? Earlier this month, an asteroid was reported to be flying past Earth, and now, residents in Ohio ...
CLEVELAND (WJW) — Residents across a vast area of Northeast Ohio feared an earthquake, some thought it was a plane crash, others an explosion early Tuesday as the ground shook and people heard a ...
(WJW) – Northeast Ohio is still buzzing after a 6-foot, 17,000-pound meteor soared across the sky on Tuesday morning before breaking apart in a “boom” that echoed across the area. The fiery spectacle ...
People across Pennsylvania and Ohio were wondering what they saw streak across the sky and the loud boom that came with it on St. Patrick’s Day morning. Calls flowed into 911 centers in both states ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. A large 7-ton meteor struck near the Cleveland, Ohio, area, on March 17, 2026, after fragmenting in the air, according to NASA. "A ...
The National Weather Service says satellite images indicated a meteor flew over the skies of Northeast Ohio. Multiple people from across Northeast Ohio reported hearing a loud boom early Tuesday ...
An asteroid weighing about 7 tons and traveling at 45,000 miles per hour zoomed over multiple states and lit up the sky as a meteor Tuesday morning, causing a loud boom that some residents mistook for ...