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KZNA-FM 90.5 serving northwest Kansas will be off the air starting the afternoon of Monday, October 20 through Friday as we replace its aging and unreliable transmitter. While we're off-air, you can keep listening to our digital stream directly above this alert or on the HPPR mobile app. This planned project is part of our ongoing commitment to maintaining free and convenient access to public radio service via FM radio to everyone in the listening area. For questions please contact station staff at (800) 678-7444 or by emailing hppr@hppr.org

Meteor exploding near Texas Panhandle causes confusion

amarillo.com

On Sunday night the American Meteor Society received a number of calls from four states in the HPPR listening area—Texas, Colorado, Oklahoma, and Kansas—about a strange explosion in the sky.

As The Amarillo Globe News reports, the disturbance was evidently the result of a meteor crashing through the atmosphere, somewhere just south of the Texas Panhandle.

A member of the volunteer fire department in Snyder, Texas, said he saw a bright light and heard what sounded like thunder. One observer in Lubbock reported seeing an orange light accompanied by a “loud boom.” In that moment, said the Lubbock witness, the sky lit up like daytime.

The “thunder” was evidently produced by a sonic boom created by the meteor. Only about one percent of meteors will actually produce a sonic boom. It’s likely that several smaller meteors survived the fall.