Likely meteor rattled residents in Ohio, Pennsylvania 18-Mar 03:30

A kaboom, a fireball and white streaks in the skies over Pennsylvania and Ohio - seen as far ​as Virginia and Canada - were probably the signs of ‌a meteorite landing near Cleveland on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service and scientists.

Rattled residents dialed 911, and local emergency officials ​called the NWS wondering "what the heck?" at about 9 ​a.m. ET (1300 GMT), said Bill Modzelewski, an NWS meteorologist ⁠in Pittsburgh.

"We’re receiving reports across western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio ​of a loud boom and a fireball in the sky. Our ​satellite data suggest it was possibly a meteor entering the atmosphere," the NWS posted online.

Laurence Garvie, a research professor and curator of the Buseck ​Center for Meteorite Studies at Arizona State University, said the ​likely landing spot was Medina, about 40 miles southwest of Cleveland, where ‌meteorite ⁠hunters lucky enough to locate the wreckage will likely find lots of little black rocks.

The booming sound was when the space object broke the sound barrier at a speed somewhere between ​25,000 and 160,000 ​miles per hour, ⁠according to Garvie. The American Meteor Society received more than 100 reports of sightings of ​the fireball, according to the online site EarthSky.

"I've ​been getting ⁠calls and texts all morning. This is very exciting for us," Garvie said. "They may just look like black stones on the ⁠ground, but ​you can actually hold something older ​than the Earth. Something from outer space. And we can learn new things ​from them."