
Sarah Marston-Jones shows off some of the inch-wide fragments which landed in her garden.
Sarah Marston-Jones was playing outside with Harry, two, and Benjamin, four, when asteroid rocks fell behind her house in Shrewsbury.
The teacher heard a large 'whooshing' sound and a 'cracking' noise as 15 rocks from the meteorite shower blazed through the earth's atmosphere and onto her lawn at 9.30am on Tuesday.
She was forced to rush her two young children off their trampoline to safety indoors as brown and black fragments showered down just inches from where they were playing.
The red-hot rocks, some of which were more than an inch wide, even left a strong burning smell in the family's Shropshire garden.
Comment: Officially, meteorites are not supposed to be red-hot when they hit the ground. So much for experts...