The United States Geological Survey reported a sonic boom that was felt across the Midlands on Thursday afternoon. But the exact cause is a mystery.
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 sonic boom shook the heart of South Carolina on Thursday, May 28, according to the US Geological Survey (USGS). Footage from Ryan Turiak shows the loud explosion shaking cameras at the ...
South Carolina was shaken by confusion and concern on May 28, after residents across the Midlands reported what sounded and ...
At 5:24 p.m. May 28, a great many people in the Columbia area heard a loud boom and felt the structures they were in shake.
A loud boom felt and heard across the midlands and Pee Dee of S.C. on Thursday was likely a meteor.
Scientists are still trying to determine what caused a sonic boom that shook Columbia last week ...
COLUMBIA, S.C. (WCBD) – Officials have reported the source of a large boom and shaking felt across the Midlands on Thursday afternoon. People who live and work in Columbia and the surrounding areas ...
A loud boom was heard in Columbia South Carolina on Thursday, leaving people confused about what caused it. The USGS later updated that it was a ‘sonic boom’.
Residents and pets across South Carolina are wondering what caused a loud boom Thursday evening.