
Texas Meteor Crashes Through Houston Home, No Injuries
A baseball-sized space rock punched through a Houston roof Saturday after NASA tracked a meteor blazing across Texas skies at 35,000 mph. Despite the dramatic entrance, everyone stayed safe in what experts call a rare cosmic close call. #
A cosmic visitor crashed through Sherrie James's Houston home Saturday afternoon, leaving a hole in her daughter's bedroom ceiling and a space rock next to the bed.
"I heard a loud boom and then a thud," James told reporters after discovering the baseball-sized meteorite. "And I'm like: What is this? Ain't no rocks got no business falling out of the sky."
NASA tracked the meteor beginning at 4:40 p.m. as it streaked southeast across clear Texas skies, visible from Stagecoach northwest of Houston. The space rock measured roughly 3 feet across, weighed about a ton, and traveled at 35,000 mph before breaking apart 29 miles above Bammel.
The spectacular show didn't go unnoticed. Doorbell cameras, dashboard recorders, and even a Little League baseball game in East Bernard captured the fiery ball of light. More than 140 people from Houston to San Antonio reported the sighting to the American Meteor Society.
The sonic booms from the meteor's pressure wave rattled windows across southeastern Texas. James said the black rock felt heavier than a baseball, and fortunately, her daughter wasn't in the room when it crashed through.

NASA's Doppler weather radar suggested other meteorite fragments may have landed between Willowbrook and Northgate Crossing. Scientists are analyzing the pieces to learn more about our solar system's building blocks.
Why This Inspires
This cosmic surprise reminds us that we're part of something bigger than our daily routines. Small space rocks hit Earth constantly, but most burn up harmlessly, protecting us without fanfare.
What makes this moment special isn't the danger, but the wonder. Kids at that Little League game got a science lesson they'll never forget. Families gathered around doorbell footage, marveling at the universe putting on a free show.
The incident came just four days after another daytime fireball lit up Ohio and Pennsylvania. Robert Lunsford from the American Meteor Society said he couldn't recall two such events happening so close together in his 20 years of tracking reports.
James plans to keep her unexpected space souvenir. Her calm reaction and quick thinking to call her grandson shows how even the most unusual moments can bring families together.
No one needed a telescope or special equipment to witness Saturday's celestial show, just clear skies and good timing.
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Based on reporting by Google News - Science
This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.
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