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“I was actually on the phone at the time and saw the bright flash (it was very bright) out of my windows,” McGhee told Gizmodo, adding that he initially thought the noise could have been thundersnow, which isn’t uncommon in the region.

Per CBS, numerous other social media users captured shots of the moment the suspected meteor broke up in the skies over Michigan. Ingham County Emergency Management Update informed residents that they had not received any “indication that anything landed on the ground or caused damage.”

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Cranbook Institute of Science astronomy chief Michael Narlock told CBS he suspected the object was a bolide meteor—a type of very bright fireball that sometimes ends with visible fragmentation of its components. Tens of thousands of meteors larger than 10 grams of material fall to Earth each year, though the vast majority fall over rural or oceanic regions well away from direct human observation.

Giant Fireball Over Michigan

[WXYZ/CBS News]