
An investigation compiled data from four databases and found 11 fireball events in 20 days. Three put holes in buildings. None were detected before impact. NASA internally codenamed the Ohio event 'Chicken Little.'
“An investigation compiled data from four databases and found 11 fireball events in 20 days. Three put holes in buildings. None were detected before impact. NASA internally codenamed the Ohio event 'Chicken Little.'”
NASA internally codenamed the Ohio fireball event "Chicken Little" — and the irony writes itself. An independent investigation pulling data from four databases found 11 fireball events in just 20 days, three of which punched holes in buildings. None were detected before impact.
NASA's planetary defense infrastructure is designed to track large asteroids. But these smaller objects — capable of destroying buildings — are invisible until they hit atmosphere. The clustering of 11 events in 20 days raises questions about whether something unusual is happening.
NASA's own All-Sky Fireball Network confirmed the events. The data is public. What nobody compiled until now was the pattern.
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