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NASA dubs falling meteorite a ‘fishy squisher’ due to where it likely landed
With the meteorite falling into 100 feet of water and likely having magnetic properties, a space rock hunter can recover it (NASA/Google Earth)
- A meteorite caused a massive boom over Cape Cod on Saturday afternoon, with NASA estimating the energy released was equivalent to 300 tons of TNT.
- NASA believes the space rock, which fragmented 40 miles over New England, landed in the middle of Cape Cod Bay, dubbing the event a “fishy squisher.”
- The impact generated widespread reports from Delaware to Montreal of loud booms, shaking, and even sightings of a fireball.
- The meteorite is a natural object, not space debris, and is potentially recoverable due to its magnetic properties and location in 100 feet of water.
- Residents described their homes shaking and feeling like doors were slamming, highlighting the significant shockwave from the event.
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