© CTV
Four high-tech cameras were installed in Alberta as part of a world-wide network to find meteorites quicker.
The cameras are part of the Australia-based Desert Fireball Network (DFN),
which now has 50 cameras across the world to track meteorites."If you have a bunch of cameras and you see something coming through the atmosphere, a fireball, but you see it from different angles, you can work out exactly its orientation," DFN's Phil Bland said.
The cameras give researchers a three-kilometre ratio of where the meteor landed.
Before this technology, people would see a fireball soar across the sky, but have no idea where it landed.
Comment: Review of 'Earth Changes and the Human-Cosmic Connection'. The book is available to purchase here.
To listen to part 2 of the interview, see: Adapt 2030 Ice Age Report: Interview with Laura Knight-Jadczyk and Pierre Lescaudron (Part 2)