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  • Dec 2004. Reflector. Experiencing the Great Oklahoma Fireball of 1920. By Bob Moody. During Christmas 1992, my preconceived notions of how big or how bright a meteor might become was forever changed. An elderly woman began asking me about something she had seen as a young girl. She then proceeded to totally redefine my understanding of big meteors, or fire balls, as they are often called. The meteor of June 8, 1920, was bigger, brighter, and louder than anything anyone had ever seen. Only those who actually saw it could begin to give the rest of us who missed it the slightest inkling as to its fantastic power and beauty. Seen by hundreds of thousands, a meteor of substantial size entered the Earth's atmosphere at around 8:45 p.m. on June 8, 1920, originating around the Arkansas-Louisiana border area, and headed westnorthwest. ...One of the first accounts I received, and probably the best overall, was given to me by 92year-old Harp Edwards of Sallisaw, Oklahoma. At the time of the event, Harp was 14 years old and lived with his family three miles west of Muldrow Oklahoma. The day's work in the fields was done, and supper was at hand for
    them, as for most rural families on that warm June evening. Harp described himself as lying on his bed, crossways at the foot, his head and shoulders squarely in the open back door. His attention was drawn over his left shoulder by a blindingly bright light fairly low over the southeast horizon. He shot up out of bed and into the back yard. He told me of seeing the meteor so low to the horizon that "it looked as if it was going to hit the dinner bell in the yard?' His gestures convinced me that he had seen something at a very low angle that was moving east to west from the southeast at between 30 and 35 degrees above the horizon. Harp described the meteor's brilliance as being at least as bright as the Sun, maybe even a little brighter. He said it almost hurt to look directly at it, but he couldn't help but keep his eyes on it. It was as big as a basketball when it began in the southeast, with a tail of fire tapering away to the east nearly five or six feet long. He watched it until it disappeared behind a ridge and thick woods at an angle of maybe 15 degrees above the southwest horizon. He also heard a "sizzling or whizzing sound" while the meteor was in sight. Scientists still wonder what can cause this phenomenon. A few moments later, after his family had joined Harp outside, a sharecropper farmer who helped with their land joined them there. At about that same time, they were hit by the sonic boom. "I've never heard anything as loud in my life," Harp told me, "not even in the Army in World War II when I was near cannons being fired. I've still never heard anything that loud, We all fell to our knees to pray!"... the remains of the Great Oklahoma Fireball of 1920 are likely still on the ground where they fell all those years ago. More reports and eyewitness accounts could be helpful in determining any sites for possible ground searches....If anyone else finds out more about this event and would like to share their stories with me, I'd be very happy to take the reports. Send your new reports to: Bob Moody, Coleman Observatory, 5533 Wildwood Road, Van Buren, AR 72956. Bob Moody is a member of the Arkansas-Oklahoma Astronomical Society. His email is bobmoody{at}aoas.org.
 


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