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A fragment from a meteorite is seen in an undated photo issued by the Natural History Museum.
A fragment from a meteorite is seen in an undated photo issued by the Natural History Museum. Photograph: Trustees of the Natural History Museum/PA
A fragment from a meteorite is seen in an undated photo issued by the Natural History Museum. Photograph: Trustees of the Natural History Museum/PA

Meteorite crashes through roof of Canada woman’s home and on to bed

This article is more than 2 years old

‘I’ve never been so scared in my life,’ says Ruth Hamilton after meteorite shower above a western Canadian region

A woman in Canada awoke in shock earlier this week when a rock crashed through the ceiling of her home and landed on her bed, narrowly missing her but spraying grit and other debris on her face, as her dog barked frantically.

Police were called and the culprit was initially suspected to be a construction site nearby, where work must have sent the fist-sized projectile onto the woman’s pillow. But when the construction workers said they had not set any blasts – but had just seen an explosion in the sky – the consensus quickly became that the rock was a meteorite, the Canadian Press reported.

Ruth Hamilton had been fast asleep in Golden, a small town amid the Rocky Mountains, in British Columbia, on 3 October when her dog began barking and she woke with a start.

“I’ve never been so scared in my life,” she said. “I wasn’t sure what to do so I called 911 and, when I was speaking with the operator, I flipped over my pillow and saw that a rock had slipped between two pillows.”

It turned out there had been a meteorite shower in the skies above the western Canadian region that night. Hamilton plans to keep the space rock and is very relieved she wasn’t injured.

“I was in shock and I just sat here for a few hours shaking,” she said. “The odds of that happening are so small so I’m pretty grateful to be alive.”

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Fireball over Scotland and NI no longer thought to be Elon Musk ‘space junk’

  • Reports of fireball over New Zealand in what scientists think was rare daytime meteor

  • New Zealand plumber captures possible meteor on his dashcam – video

  • Loud boom and streaking fireball stirs panic in three US states

  • Experience: a meteorite crashed on to my bed

  • Pittsburgh New Year’s Day meteor explosion equivalent to 27 tonnes of TNT, says Nasa

  • Meteorites from sky fireball 'likely to be found near Cheltenham'

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