We might have a meter but we don't know how can we tell accept the magnet test
A meteor. If any of it survives the fall through the atmosphere and makes it to Earth, that part is a meteorite.
The location of the meteor shower can vary from time to time, but it mostly takes place in either the troposphere or the stratosphere.
It could be a meteor.
Tunguska Meteor
meteor.
this doesnt tell us much infact it tells us nothing except that a meteor landed there or a chunk of that meteor landed there
The chances of it being a meteor are much greater than it being a star. Stars are burning gasses. If there is no fire then it could be a meteor.
Well... you can tell a meteor from a comet by being good at spelling, C-O-M-E-T M-E-T-E-O-R
Well... you can tell a meteor from a comet by being good at spelling, C-O-M-E-T M-E-T-E-O-R
Well... you can tell a meteor from a comet by being good at spelling, C-O-M-E-T M-E-T-E-O-R
Well... you can tell a meteor from a comet by being good at spelling, C-O-M-E-T M-E-T-E-O-R
if you take a magnet and put it on two rocks then the meteor rock will attract and the other rock will stay
The suffix "meteor" is typically used to indicate a connection to meteors or meteorites, such as in the words "meteoric" (resembling a meteor) or "meteorite" (a fragment of a meteor).
A visible meteor is a meteor that can be seen by the naked-eye
The correct spelling is meteorite (a meteor that reaches the ground).
meteor
Meteor Rain? Are you thinking of Meteor Mash or Draco Meteor or are you playing Pokemon Black & White