NASA, meteor and Sonic boom
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Scientists are still trying to determine what caused a sonic boom that shook Columbia last week
A meteor expert says a Lexington home camera caught the likely culprit: an aircraft breaking the sound barrier, not a fireball from space.
A mysterious shaking in South Carolina has been identified. But its cause leaves more questions than answers. (AP Photo)
A loud boom was heard and felt across the Midlands on Thursday.
Two bases say it wasn't them. NASA reported no meteor. A leading theory: an aircraft went supersonic, and the sound bounced for miles.
More than 1,700 people reported feeling the sonic boom that happened a day prior to this seismic activity.