![Scientists ask residents in Niagara, Ont., to look for meteor pieces after weekend fireball](https://i.cbc.ca/1.6659415.1669067228!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/meteor-crash-in-grimsby-lake-ontario.jpg)
Scientists ask residents in Niagara, Ont., to look for meteor pieces after weekend fireball
CBC
A meteorite, one metre in diameter, lit up the southern Ontario sky early Saturday morning before it crash landed into Lake Ontario and along the shoreline of Grimsby, Ont., in the Niagara region.
The landing now has scientists asking residents to keep an eye out for the space rocks — which could be billions of years old.
The European Space Agency said this is only the sixth time that a meteor, which turns into a meteorite as it falls to earth and breaks apart, has been detected well before impact by global asteroid warning systems.
The systems were able to tell scientists where and when the asteroid was going to hit.
The meteorite, labelled object C8FF042 by the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), hit Lake Ontario around 3:30 a.m. Saturday morning.
People across southern Ontario, from Toronto to Brantford, caught sight of the meteorite. Some shared home security camera footage on social media over the weekend of it catching fire and lighting up the night sky.
Others said they heard a loud sound around that time, which researchers CBC spoke to said was a sonic boom, made as the meteorite travelled faster than the speed of sound.
Peter Brown, a physics professor at Western University in London, Ont., is a member of the Western Meteor Physics Group (WMPG), which studies meteors using cameras.
"We have a network of cameras in southern Ontario and southern Quebec and the network is constantly watching the night sky," he said, adding that his meteor watching group has about 20 cameras trained at the sky.
Brown said WMPG's goal is to capture footage of "bright meteors that produce fireballs," like the one that landed in Lake Ontario over the weekend.
He said WMPG captured the meteor on 12 of their cameras, and that it was as "bright as the moon" and could have been seen across most of southern Ontario, in places where the clouds didn't block it from view.
Brown said his group detects "several fairly bright meteors a night," but said objects of this size — which is what creates the fireball — only hit the earth a few times a week and are rarely documented in southern Ontario, he said.
"The fireball was only visible in southern Ontario, but there was a global network of telescopes and observers who were able to track the object as it came in," he said, adding that the network of telescopes tracking the meteor from around the world will help advance meteor tracking science.
"We're hoping people will... start looking for those rocks. Scientists are very interested in being able to get samples of those rocks," he said.