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Something is happening around Earth: Inside 2026’s massive fireball surge
https://www.zmescience.com/science/news-...all-surge/

EXCERPTS: During the first three months of 2026, our planet waded through an unusually dense shooting gallery. The American Meteor Society (AMS) has tracked a staggering wave of large, bright meteors — known as fireballs — lighting up skies from California to Germany.

Earth sweeps up tons of space dust every day. Usually, this material is the size of a grain of sand and burns up harmlessly in the upper atmosphere. But right now, we are colliding with much bigger rocks. And scientists are scrambling to figure out why.

[...] “After years of stable baseline activity, something appears to have shifted,” Hankey wrote in the AMS report. “The signal is consistent across multiple metrics.” If you look strictly at the raw numbers, the sky doesn’t look like it is falling. In the first quarter of 2026, the AMS recorded 2,046 total fireball events. That is high, but only marginally above the 2,037 events recorded in 2022 for the same three-month window. What’s changed is the physical size of the rocks from space.

Usually, a fireball event draws a handful of witnesses. But in March 2026 alone, five different fireballs exceeded 200 eyewitness reports. That is more mass-sighting events in one month than all previous Marches combined over the last fifteen years.

[...] So, what exactly is throwing these rocks at us? To find out, astronomers calculate a meteor’s radiant — the apparent point in the sky from which the fireball originated. By mapping the trajectories of these massive fireballs, researchers found two suspicious clusters.

The most prominent is the Anthelion sporadic source. This is a region of space sitting directly opposite the sun. Objects coming from the Anthelion direction are essentially catching up to Earth from behind as they plunge deeper into the inner solar system. Historically, this region has always produced a few fireballs.

[...] Earth is moving through a changed neighborhood. The rocks are bigger, they are louder, and they are hitting the atmosphere with alarming frequency.

“Whether this represents normal statistical variance, an uncharacterized debris population, or something else entirely will require continued monitoring and further analysis,” Hankey said... (MORE - missing details)