Giant fireball over Moscow, October 27, 2025
From Skyfire To Ground Fire in Chiapas, Mexico.
NIBIRU DEBRIS ECLIPSES THE MOON!
USA October 21, 2025
Source: https://t.me/ZetaTalk_Followers/78341
Nancy's vision for November is undeniable Nibiru evidence: Skyfire, Fireballs and SkyGlow.
“SkyGlow is the most frightening phase, occurring when vast amounts of
Nibiru debris crash into the upper atmosphere all at once.” ~Nancy Lieder 10/20/2025
SkyFire—Nibiru Debris, analysis of 4 pictures of a burning mass recorded in the sky over Mexico on 18.10.25.
ZetaTalk: Live Chat, written November 21, 2009
Comment
Green fireball spotted in South Florida by dozens of people (3/29/16)

The American Meteor Society said this morning that dozens of people are reporting to have spotted a bluish or green fireball over South Florida at about 6:30am.
More than 40 [at least 62] reports were made to the AMS from people who claim to have witnessed the event from Kendall to Jupiter. Nine reports came from people in Palm Beach County.
Mike Hankey, operations manager for the American Meteor Society, said it was a random fireball and not part of a known meteor shower.
...A report from a West Palm Beach man says the fireball cut a long trail across the sky.
“Train was glowing an iridescent or almost neon blue with white edges,” the man reported. “Looked like it was 300-500 yards behind the fireball itself but was still attached to the head of the fireball.”
http://weatherplus.blog.palmbeachpost.com/2016/03/29/green-fireball...
Fireball over Granada on 20 March 2016
Slow-moving fireball recorded on 20 March 2016 at 22h36m UT (23h 36m local time) over Granada [Spain].
BIG fireball over Belgium, N France, Netherlands last night!
MARCH 26 2015
https://www.facebook.com/severeweatherEU/photos/a.1423656947857402....
Severe Weather Europe
Page Liked · 54 mins
BIG fireball over Belgium, N France, Netherlands last night! Cameras of various meteor observation networks captured a very bright fireball last night at neary exactly local midnigh (23:00:45 UT). The fireball was nearly as bright as the full Moon! Did you see it?
report to: http://fireballs.imo.net/members/imo/report_intro - it is *really* easy!
Image: Astropodcast.fr - the image is symbolic
http://www.amsmeteors.org/2016/03/very-large-fireball-over-uk/
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3496452/Meteor-lights-night...
A fireball has lit up the sky over Britain overnight - and has been named the St Patrick's Day meteor because it caused a green flash.
The bright bolt of light was spotted across Hampshire, Sussex, Berkshire and in London at around 3.15am.
Footage of the meteor was captured on the dashboard camera by a driver travelling through Battersea.
The UK Meteor Observation Network also picked up the flash at their Church Crookham station, near Fleet in Hampshire.
Sky at Night Presenter Pete Lawrence was filming for the show and described how: 'The sky went bright blue due' and then a 'very bright green'.
James West, from near Southampton, told his local paper that that the flash was so bright it 'lit up the bedroom curtains'.
The meteor, which experts say was probably the size of a double decker bus when it crashed into the atmosphere, may have been visible as far north as Scotland.
Meteor recorded by astronomy club cameras in Odessa, Ukraine and Mayaky, Ukraine on 3/9/16
https://www.inverse.com/article/12569-nasa-s-fireball-program-will-...
If it weren’t for NASA’s automated Fireball and Bolide Reports system, no one would have ever known about the asteroid. The rock in question broke the surface of the Atlantic Ocean in February after piercing the atmosphere with the force of 13,000 tons of TNT. It was traveling thousands of miles an hour. Had it hit a city, no one would have seen it coming.
If you give an astronomer an asteroid’s size, its angular velocity, and composition, he or she could give you a decent approximation of what would happen when the asteroid hits. Less clear is predicting where on earth impacts are most likely to occur. But there’s a good chance it’s wet. “Just over 70 percent of Earth’s surface is ocean, which means about 70 percent of the impactors will land in water,” says William Cooke, a small-object expert with the Meteoroid Environment Office at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Alabama.
This is true.
As a species that wants to survive for another couple hundred thousand years, we’ve become increasingly invested in tracking the asteroids in our solar system. Not because the frozen chunks of rock are particularly interesting on their own, but because they have the potential to become either meteors (the bright fireball flashes in the sky) or meteorites (the hunk of space rock that lands on Earth). If those are big enough, of course, they become extinction-level events. NASA keeps an eye on larger asteroids in the solar system, like the “big-ass meteor” that zipped by Monday morning. But where an object is likely to land is a bit of an astronomic crapshoot.
As far as we know, impact events aren’t more likely to land at, say, the equator than a pole. “No pattern discernible, as you can see from this plot released by NASA in November of 2014,” Cooke says. “Looks pretty random.”

Compounding the problem is that meteoric events, if they occur in isolated areas, go unreported. There are a few ways to spot meteors without human eyes or sensors, like seismometers, infrasound arrays, and satellite cameras. Cooke needs compound eyes to keep watch on the whole planet. But that’s just to get data, not to wring out a conclusion about when asteroids wind up hitting water or rock. There is simply no way to know that yet.
“We are just now beginning to establish networks that don’t rely on human feedback to extract information about fireballs,” Cooke says — NASA’s fireball program relies on cameras to spot unusually bright spots around the globe, for instance — “and the coverage is nowhere near what we need.”
When the program is up and running, data collection will improve significantly and we’ll be able to install “Beware of Falling Rocks” signs at appropriate locations.
(3/9/16)
...Between March 2nd and March 8th only, the AMS recorded 6 major fireball events over the US only:

...In the weeks around the start of spring, NASA noticed that the appearance rate of fireballs can increase by as much as 30 percent.
The American Meteor Society statistics tend to show that February is the most active month for fireballs.
...NASA has no hypothesis on this fact and only notes that “more space debris litters this section of Earth’s orbit”
Fireball Caught On Tape over Missouri on March 4th, 2016 (3/7/16)

This event has been caught on tape by Tim Zikowsky while setting up this dash cam on his way to work (at 0:10):
The American Meteor Society has received about 40 reports so far of a bright fireball on March 4th, 2016. The fireball was seen primarily from Missouri and Oklahoma but witnesses from Kansas, Arkansas, Missippi, and Texas also reported seeing this fireball. This event occurred near 10:53pm CST (04:33 on March 5th Universal Time).
http://www.amsmeteors.org/2016/03/fireball-caught-on-tape-over-miss...

'Unusual' local meteor sighting reported (3/3/16)
Wednesday night, just before 10 p.m., sky-watchers from Maine to Philadelphia — and more than a few in the Lower Hudson Valley — caught a glimpse of a fireball, a meteor, burning up to dust as it entered the Earth’s atmosphere.
The American Meteor Society keeps a map of public meteor sightings and, according to Operations Manager Mike Hankey, about 34 [42] reports were received from across the Northeast, including one from Dobbs Ferry and another from Ardsley.
“It seemed to burn out at a low angle above the horizon,” said Andrew Ploski, of Nyack. “My 9-year-old son and I were traveling back home last night after a visit with his grandmother in Yonkers. We were traveling north on the Sprain Brook Parkway near the Ardsley Road overpass. There appeared a large, very bright fireball with trail about the brightness and size of a car headlight. It streaked across my field of vision very quickly from my upper right to lower left — east to west.”
http://www.lohud.com/story/tech/science/environment/2016/03/03/rare...
Fireball Over Plymouth UK (Mar 1)
Ray Griffin, aged 70, was at home when he saw the "light in the sky" at about 10pm on Tuesday.
Mr Griffin, landlord of the Morley Arms in Plymstock, then heard what he describes as "gun fire" after the light disappeared.
The following day he was catching up with a pub regular, who described exactly the same turn of events.
Now Mr Griffin wants to get to the bottom of the strange sight.
"It was moving away from Laira Bridge," he recalls, "towards the A38. It looked like a bright orange ball of fire flying across the sky.
"It carried on going over and then disappeared, like somebody had just switched it off."
"There is quite a lot of meteor and NEO asteroid activity at the moment around the world. However, people only tend to pay attention when they see something for themselves or they are directly affected, and not until then."
Source
http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/Did-meteor-fly-Plymouth-Pub-landlor...
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