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3 November, fireball over the Mediterranean (Spain)
This stunning North Taurid meteor event was spotted over the south of Spain on 3 Nov. 2017 at 0:46 local time (23:46 universal time on 2 Nov.). It was brighter than the full Moon. It was produced by a fragment from Comet Encke that hit the atmosphere at about 110,000 km/h. The event overflew the Mediterranean Sea and the province of Almeria. It began at an altitude of about 122 km and ended at a height of around 63 km. The meteor was recorded in the framework of the SMART project (University of Huelva) from the meteor-observing stations located at La Hita (Toledo), Sierra Nevada (Granada), La Sagra (Granada) and Sevilla.
 
3 November, fireball over the Mediterranean (Spain)

Back to back sightings. :whistle:

Translated from Spanish by Microsoft
A large ball of fire flies over Castilla-La Mancha. Produced by rock from a comet that impacted the atmosphere at 100mil km/h. @elsegundoluz @ElHuffPost @AstroyFisica @AstroHita @LeoAstronomada @miangulo_95 @cefalopodo

Major floods hit Sicily last night, multiple fatalities reported – November 4, 2018
04 November 2018 Facebook posts
As expected, major floods hit parts of Sicily last night as slowly moving convective lines and persistent training storms produced prolonged torrential rainfall. The city of Palermo in northern Sicily was hit particularly hard, with 12 fatalities

Published on Nov 3, 2018

 
3 November, huge sinkhole at Hickory, North Carolina, the guy mentions that, the sinkhole was very little in comparison weeks ago, although, I found that it started many weeks ago in a news site from August 2018 https://www.hickoryrecord.com/news/...cle_7fd62d18-99a9-11e8-8808-6bbb8b21afd6.html ... and, they had been having issues repairing it, seemed to me a little apologetic, though, but I understand given the conditions as hurricane Florence
... https://www.hickoryrecord.com/news/...cle_64733e84-e14e-11e8-81aa-af9d6036a26f.html
5b689867786ee.image.jpg
 
Published on Nov 9, 2018

Translated from Spanish by Microsoft
#MeteoredMX a huge swirl of dust literally swallowed a group of Chilean workers last Tuesday. We told you what happened. Diablito de polvo sorprende a trabajadores chilenos


Published on Nov 4, 2018
I caught these images on November 4, 2018, at around 11 pm, in northern Sweden, using a Canon 5D MkII and a 24-105 mm lens. Enhanced in Adobe Photoshop/Bridge and edited in Premiere. It was a mild night with a temperature of a pleasant +6 degrees Celsius and no snow on the ground yet, which is rather nice for this time of the year.
 
12 hours ago
Karen Foshay, a KCET-TV journalist reporting on the Woosley Fire blazing through parts of Southern California, came face to face Friday evening with a “firenado,” calling the encounter among the most “terrifying” events she has ever experienced.
“Let’s get out of here,” someone is heard urging as the firenado formed along the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, the video shared to Instagram shows.
Source


Translated from French by Microsoft
One #Trombe evolves by #tornade returning to the land 🌪 to #MandelieuLaNapoule. #Meteo06 📽 Francis Ten. @KeraunosObs @Meteovilles @F3cotedazur @francebleuazur @LCMKarine

Side note:
 
11 November

This bright meteor event was spotted over southern Spain on 11 Nov. 2018 at 2:08 local time (1:08 universal time). It was generated by a rock from an asteroid that hit the atmosphere at about 72,000 km/h. The meteor overflew the province of Jaén. It began at an altitude of about 90 km and ended at a height of around 42 km. The event was recorded in the framework of the SMART project (University of Huelva) from the meteor-observing stations located at La Hita (Toledo), Calar Alto (Almeria), La Sagra (Granada) and Sevilla.

The meteor on this video was recorded over southern Spain on 11 Nov. 2018 at 4:11 local time (3:11 universal time). It was generated by a rock from a comet that hit the atmosphere at about 75,000 km/h. The meteor overflew the provinces of Granada and Málaga. It began over Granada at an altitude of about 130 km and ended over Málaga at a height of around 79 km. The event was recorded in the framework of the SMART project (University of Huelva) from the meteor-observing stations located at La Hita (Toledo), Calar Alto (Almeria), La Sagra (Granada) and Sevilla.
 

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