Fireballs
However, it was not yet clear whether it was a meteorite or any other object.
Meanwhile, the Disaster Management Centre said they received a large number of inquiries from residents from the Dambulla to Seruwila stretch about a mysterious light in the sky.
The DMC said that they had alerted the Security Forces and Police about the complaints they received.
She said: "Was a big flash then looked like something falling on fire, happened last night.
"The picture was taken from Benhall lookin towards glos/tewks. I zoomed in on it on my camera for a few shots."
Did you see it? What could it be?
"The meteoroid was about 15 inches in diameter and weighed close to 100 lbs," says Bill Cooke of NASA's Meteoroid Environment Office. "Travelling 47,000 miles per hour, it broke apart in a brilliant flash of light above the Alabama town of Henagar. Our cameras continued to track a large fragment until it disappeared 18 miles above Gaylesville, located near Lake Weiss close to the Georgia state line.

The 'fireball' seen across the Perth sky about 6am on Monday. Taken with a fish-eye lens.
There were a number of similar reports from across the metropolitan area of a blue/green light flashing across the morning sky shortly before sunrise.
The flash was caught on one of a number of cameras set up as part of the Desert Fireball Network, set up to photograph such astronomical events.
Curtin Faculty of Science Engineering Professor Phil Bland said the light captured on the camera was "really bright", indicating that it could have been a "decent-sized rock".
He said about 20 per cent of meteors made it to land without burning up.
Professor Bland said researchers would look at the images in more detail to find out more information.
Two interesting events last night and this morning on my allsky cams on the Sandia Sentinel TX station allsky cams.
First at 07:27:18 UT was a very bright fireball just to my north that lit up the sky. It appears to have come in at a Very steep angle.
Second was a double meteor, also to my north, at 11:08:56 UT.
I'm also including data from the Very low Light integrating cam of the fireball for trajectory reference.
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A reader from Upper Stoke, near Poringland, "saw a really bright green light - which seemed to be torpedo-shaped, travelling across the sky towards Norwich, at great speed but absolutely silently.
"I could see it travelling through and above the clouds as I could see cloud beneath the light. It vanished completely after about three seconds."
"It was travelling faster than any plane I have seen and was so bright I initially thought firework but it was a) too high; b) there were no other fireworks and c) it made no noise or explosion.
Tyson explained that he doesn't see himself as an advocate, but as an educator whose job it is to present "emergent scientific consensus," in the hope that the public and policy makers will use it to make informed decisions.
"I'm just trying to get people as fully informed as they can be so that they can make the most informed decisions they can based on their own principles or philosophies or mission statement," Tyson explained. "What concerns me is that I see people making decisions, particularly decisions that might affect policy or governance, that are partly informed, or misinformed, or under-informed."
Tyson notes that during the Cold War, physicists actively advocated for specific policies because those policies were directly related to their work in developing nuclear weapons. When it comes to climate change, he would like to see more climate scientists take the lead instead of an astrophysicist like himself just because he's famous.

The Rothney Observatory posted this photo to its Twitter account Tuesday afternoon, saying the object in the bottom-left corner is a fireball over Calgary.
The Rothney Observatory reports that a fireball - which is larger than a meteor - was seen at 1:24 a.m. Tuesday.
"They're so bright that if you're standing, you'll see your shadow, just like in the daytime," said Dr. Phil Langill, who directs the University of Calgary observatory.
A meteor is a small rock from outer space that burns up as it enters Earth's atmosphere. Langill said a fireball is even larger.
"Essentially they're the same thing; it's just a matter of scale," he said.
Scores of people took to Twitter and emailed the Herald about the sudden flash of light.
Jesse Shan was on his south-facing Marda Loop balcony when he saw what appeared to be cloudless lightning just southeast of the city.
Initial Meteor Sighting Reports:
18JUL2014 Ashley Franklin Ohio 5:03 am est 6 E Bright Green followed by red flame very bright fire balls falling off I've seen shooting stars/comets before but never seen nothing like we just saw this morning. My fiance said omg what the heck is that I look up and see a huge bright green ball falling from the sky. It was pretty cool to see
18JUL2014 Genia Bloomington, Indiana USA 5:00:00 10 Eastern sky traveling left to right Blue and red tail bright white head Brighter then the moon No It was so brilliant and colorful.
18JUL2014 j. duke marietta, ohio 500 3 seconds Facing SW Direction of travel W to E about 30 deg RA only lost sight because of obstructions to view green with yellow halo and tail no other heavenly bodies for comparison. not as bright as the sun or moon but quite visable. Looked as a firework. single object I was returning home from work. Stopped at a traffic light. Checking for cross-traffic I observed the object, and watched as it passed veiwable area between buildings.
Comment: As the chart below vividly shows, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of reported fireballs for the last 2 years.
Many people reported seeing the bright light in the sky between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. EDT. Dan Perhar, a software developer at North Carolina University, captured it around 10:15 p.m. as he was driving on Interstate 440 in Raleigh.
He posted the short video on YouTube.
NASA Solar System Ambassador and WRAL contributor Tony Rice viewed the video. "Looking at that dashcam video it looked pretty low on the horizon. That flash may have been it breaking up," Rice posted on Twitter.
Comment: As the chart below vividly shows, there has been a dramatic increase in the number of reported fireballs for the last 2 years.
Comment: Possibly the same fireball in following video capture also from Saturday 2. August in Alabama: