Meteor lights up NZ skies

Reports have flooded in of a meteor lighting up skies across the country last night.

WeatherWatch forecaster Philip Duncan said his website, WeatherWatch.co.nz, had received reports throughout the day from around the globe, but from 9pm there were "dozens" of reports from around the country.

Eyewitnesses described the meteor as being all sorts of colours, Mr Duncan said.

One person posted that they had seen a "very bright shooting star" about 9pm in Hastings.

"It looked like a fireball that got bigger as it was falling and then just burned out."

 

A person in Mt Roskill described seeing what they initially thought was fireworks.

"But this thing was no fireworks, the green light was the size of a basketball, heading horizontally on a downward slope across the sky."

Others reported seeing the light over the King Country, Manawatu, Taranaki, the top of the South Island and Canterbury.

According to Nasa, small chunks of rock and debris in space are called meteoroids. They become meteors, or shooting stars, when they fall through a planet's atmosphere, leaving a bright trail as they are heated into incandescence by the friction of the atmosphere.

Pieces that survive the journey and hit the ground are called meteorites.

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