Hello John and Doves,
Interesting
timing. Seems there has been a significant uptick in
fireballs - not just sightings. A fireball is a
'exceptionally bright meteor' that is about the size of a
baseball or larger. Astronomers have reported over 40
'meteor events' along with loud detonations and sonic booms
in just March 2026 - this is nearly double the average
historically. No one can explain what has caused this
uptick in these or the significant increase in their size.
Peak fireball season is
usually February through April. I certainly don't
remember so many sightings, so many amazing videos with
large fireballs, or so many meteorites actually hitting
houses.
Looks like Earth is
passing through some sort of debris field.
Fireballs
Over the US and Europe:
Fireballs were sighted
above Ohio, Texas, California, Michigan, Virginia, Kentucky,
Kansas, Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, Arkansas, Georgia, Florida,
Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Oregon, South Carolina, and
the country of Canada. They have also been
sighted over Europe. A big one crossed Central Europe
on March 8. It was seen over France, Belgium, the
Netherlands, Luxembourg...And part of it smashed into a
house in Germany. Also, Australia, the U.K., France,
Barbados, Brazil, New Zealand, Cameroon, Switzerland, Italy,
Austria, Poland, Ireland, Czech Republic, and Turkey have
reported these.
Mysterious
Fireball Over Europe Left Viewers In Awe & Damaged At
Least One Home
A cluster of large
fireballs was also reported as "unprecedented".
The
American Meteor Society and NASA Weigh In:
The American Meteor
Society "recorded ten fireball events before mid-March
2026...Over 30 major fireballs produced sonic booms in the
first quarter of 2026." And there has been "increased
activity in early 2026" from the Anthelion sporadic meteor
source (this is the region of space directly opposite of the
Sun). Why did this Anthelion meteor source double its
output in early 2026?
"March
2026 stands out for the intensity and number of
fireballs. Several produced meteorites in a short time
- an uncommon event."
The American Meteor
Society said "We might see 10 meteorite recoveries a year
worldwide. We have three recoveries in a week or ten
days." The AMS reported that "events with 50 or more
reports have more than doubled. Events with over 100
reports have also doubled compared to recent averages...This pattern suggests
a genuine change in incoming material, not just more
people reporting. Something unusual appears to have
occurred in the distribution of large events."
"While AI and new
detection tech make reporting easier, they do not explain
why there are more large, energetic fireball events."
"Something else that
supports the hypothesis that recent meteors have been
larger than usual is the prevalence of sonic booms
- loud, explosive sounds caused by shockwaves when
meteoroids, small rocky or metallic bodies from space,
penetrate deeper into the Earth's atmosphere than
usual. This deeper entry often indicates larger or
denser objects...In early 2026, nearly 80% of large
fireballs (those with 50+ reports) produced audible booms -
an unusually high rate. It's not a metric that can be
artificially inflated by reporting effects."
"Together,
these findings suggest that at least part of the surge
reflects a real increase in the number of substantial
incoming objects."
"The spike in fireballs
is not related to a meteor shower....These fireballs come
from asteroids, not comets."
"The emerging
picture is of a real shift, albeit one that's not yet
fully understood. Multiple lines of
evidence - from increased sonic booms to higher witness
counts for large events - point toward a change in the types
of meteoroids entering Earth's atmosphere."
Fireball
sightings are surging across the US — here's what's really
going on | Space
How common are
fireballs? "Large fireballs typically fall
somewhere on Earth about once a day, while smaller
pieces of space dust might fall 10 times an hour."
(About 48 tons of meteoritic material falls on to the
Earth every day.)
"The next meteor
shower is the Lyrids. That shower will run from
April 14 to April 30, peaking on April 21 - 24.
NASA has an "All Sky
Fireball Network" with cameras located in New Mexico,
Arizona, Alabama, Georgia, Tennessee, North Carolina,
Florida, Virginia, Pennsylvania, Texas, California, and
Ohio.
ASGARD Web Log
NASA can only track
asteroids that are 140 meters and larger..."because of the
small size of the meteoroids, it's almost impossible to
track them in space." And "most meteorites come from
the asteroid belt between Mars and Jupiter", some originate
from Mars and the Moon.
This
recent pattern of increase in fireballs "warrants serious
investigation"
Is this just the
beginning of something? Is the Earth passing through
an unusually dense population of meteors and will soon pass
out of it? Or is this the beginning of apocalyptic
space objects?
We know in The
Revelation that 'stars' fall to Earth and cause catastrophic
damage - destroying ships, killing sea life, turning waters
to blood/bitter. In Matthew 24 we are told the 'stars
will fall from the sky and heavenly bodies are
shaken'. In The Revelation Chapter 6 'the stars in the
sky fall to earth', Chapter 8 'a huge blazing mountain falls
into the sea' - killing 1/3 of the sea creatures and
destroying 1/3 of the ships, Chapter 8 'a great star,
blazing like a torch, fell to Earth, called Wormwood' -
turns a third of the water bitter/to poison.
Will we see a continued
rise in fireballs/meteorites? IF so, is something
coming? Something bigger? Are these a harbinger
of coming apocalypse?
Pray for the peace of
Jerusalem!
Maranatha!
Chance