/ 13 July 2004

Meteor shower triggers flood of rescue calls

A burst of meteors over Finnish coastal waters early on Tuesday prompted hundreds of Finns to mistakenly report the natural phenomenon as emergency flares from distressed vessels, officials said.

”The shower might have lasted just a few seconds, but so far we have gotten over 70 calls. The first hour was very busy here,” said Matti Salokorpi, senior lieutenant with the maritime rescue centre in Vaasa, about 420km north-west of Helsinki.

On a normal night the rescue centre might get about 10 calls, he said, adding that Vaasa’s ambulance and fire services had received as many calls due to the natural phenomenon created when space debris hits the Earth’s atmosphere at high speed.

Several other rescue centres along the Finnish west coast reported numerous similar calls, according to media in Helsinki.

One of the callers, cruising in his pleasure boat off the coast, described the phenomenon as a red fireball moving swiftly through the night sky, spewing sparks and leaving a trail of vapor before turning white as it entered the atmosphere, Finnish news agency FNB reported.

A glowing meteor can easily be mistaken for an emergency flare, which is an international alarm signal for sailors in need of assistance, Salokorpi said.

According to Finnish and international maritime regulations, any person who sees an emergency flare is bound by law to report it, he said. It is up to the rescue centre to decide whether such an observation is a distress call or not, and not the observer. — Sapa-AFP