Numerous calls from across the county about a fireball in the sky falling near the San Bernardino mountains came into San Bernardino County Fire Dispatch Tuesday morning, but officials could not identify what it was.
Countless people, including fire personnel, from the Nevada
stateline to Temecula reported seeing a brightly colored streak falling
from the northwestern sky at about 10:40 a.m., said County Fire
Dispatch Supervisor, Tom Barnes.
Search crews from several agencies including Barstow, Arrowhead
and Cal Fire have all attempted to track down a landing site, but have
come up empty.
Barstow Fire Protection District personnel was dispatched to the
Calico area and found no evidence of a meteorite hitting the ground.
Some
Barstow fire officials also saw the object and reported that it may
have burned up in the atmosphere before it made impact, Barnes reported.
Officials from Vanderbilt Air Force Base and Edwards Air Force
Base state they do not know what the object is but say it may be a
natural occurring meteor or meteorite. Officials for Air Force Space
Command are currently looking into whether the object is something that
the office tracks on a regular basis, but had no explanation on what it
may be.
All of the calls described a fast-moving object falling near the San Bernardino Mountains area.
The original call came in from a Lake Arrowhead man who thought the object may have been an aircraft in trouble, Barnes said.
After
sending out fire crews and not finding any wreckage, investigators
began to look into the possibility it may have been a meteor or some
other space rock.
“When I saw it I thought, ‘Oh my god!’” said Dan Bowman, 68, of
Apple Valley, a former Air Force Intercontinental Ballistic Missle
technician.
He said he was amazed at how visible the object was despite it
being daylight and thought that it may have landed near the Bell
Mountain area or maybe even the Stoddard Wells Recreation area.
Fire crews from Clark County Nevada Fire near the stateline say they saw it as well, Barnes said.
Bowman was on his way to pick up parts for his antique truck when he noticed a bright object speeding towards Earth.
“I saw it for three of four seconds,” Bowman said. “The front of
it looked like a glacier blue and then it got orangey. The tail-end of
it was white like big shattered mirrors.”
Investigators are still looking into the incident.