SUBJECT: 11/86 SIGHTING IN FT. MYERS, FL. FILE: UFO1371 Report #: 219 From: UFO INFO SERVICE Date Sent: 02-15-1987 Subject: FT.MYERS, FL CASE TYPE: LRS - NL DATE: 27 NOVEMBER 1986 TIME: 22:00 HOURS CFN#: 0341 DURATION: 15:MINUTES WITNESSES: MANY SOURCE: NEWS PRESS, FT MYERS, FL ---------------------------------------------- GREEN FLASH LIGHTS SKY ACROSS FLORIDA From News-Press Staff and Wirs Services Residents from Southwest Florida to the East Coast og the state Thursday reported seeing a green flash in the sky that lasted approximately 15 minutes, officials said. Callers reported the sighting between 10 and 10:30 P.M. to the Collier County Sheriff's office, an official their said. The sighting was also reported in Charlotte County, a Lee Sheriff's Department spokesman said. A short time after the west coast sighting, residents of the east coast of Florida saw a flare and then heard an explosion, according to a spokesman for the U.S. Coast Guard office in Fort Pierce. Some people even reported a loud sound similiar to thunder that shook houses, the Coast Guard office reported. Unconfirmed reports from across the state said the green streak across the sky was a meteorite which may have landed in the Atantic Ocean. Officials from Patrick Air Force Base in Cape Canaveral could not confirm that the sighting was a meteorte, but said the matter would be investigated today. It was the second time in a week that residents along Florida's Atlantic Coast reported seeing a flash of bright colored light streak across the late night sky. Last Friday, a streak of light seen in the night sky from Tampa to Jmaica produced a similar effect and was apparently produced by debris from a Soviet rocket passing through the Earth's atmosphere. A resident in the West Palm Beach area described the Thursday night light as bright yellow, white another in the area said the light started out red, turned to blue, then pink and yellow. Mike Palmeriti, an astronomer in Malabar, saw the light between 9:30 and 10:00 p.m. He believed it was a "very strong flash of lightning." But Harold Povenmire, a professor at Brevard Community College and director of the Florida Fire Bill Patrol, said he is certain the flash of light was caused by a meteorite entering the atmosphere at 10:03 p.m.. He also stated the light was preceded by a sonic boom that "rattled things around quite a bit." ********************************************** * THE U.F.O. BBS - http://www.ufobbs.com/ufo * **********************************************