The Tasman Corridor: A "Deep Penetration" Meteor Cluster (March 17–24, 2026).
While the world’s attention was on the Autumn Equinox, the Tasman Sea has been quietly experiencing a significant "cross-fire" of meteoric activity. For those tracking the connection between atmospheric airbursts and cetacean behavior, the last seven days have provided a textbook case of high-energy, deep-penetrating entries.
The "New" Threat: M2025-F1 (The Puppis Source).
The standout discovery of the week is the return of the M2025-F1 source, first identified by the Global Meteor Network last year.
Velocity: Extremely slow at 15 km/sec. Why it matters: Most meteors burn up high in the mesosphere. At 15km/sec, these objects are "slow burners." They penetrate much deeper into the stratosphere, where the air is denser. This increased resistance often leads to terminal airbursts rather than simple disintegration. Radiant: Located in the constellation Puppis (the Stern), placing the entry corridor directly over the Southern Ocean and the southern Tasman Sea.
Timeline of Events
|
Date (2026) |
Event |
Details |
|
March 17 |
The Sunrise Bolide |
A massive, slow-moving orange fireball was visible for nearly 3 minutes across the eastern NZ coast. It left a persistent smoke train—a clear sign of deep atmospheric penetration. |
|
March 17 |
Abel Tasman Seismic Cluster |
Within hours of the bolide, 5 shallow tremors (up to Mag 2.6) were recorded in the Tasman Sea. This raises the question of atmospheric-seismic coupling from pressure waves. On March 17, a magnitude 3.0 seismic event was recorded near Wollongong/Shellharbour at 2:36 PM. While unconfirmed as a meteor (it wasn't an earthquake either), the timing falls within this high-activity window. |
|
March 18 |
The Queenstown "Orange Explosion" |
At 9:15 PM, a fireball was seen in the western sky ending in a visible terminal burst. Given the location, the pressure wave from this airburst terminated directly over the central Tasman Sea. |
|
March 21 |
Delta Pavonids Peak Begins |
Unlike the Puppis meteors, these are fast (59km/sec). The combination of slow, deep "thumpers" and fast, high-altitude fragments is creating a high-energy environment over the Tasman. |
The Biological Connection
I continue to monitor the Tasman and NSW coastlines. While no major mass strandings have been reported this week, a group of Beaked Whales was found in the shallows of Flinders Island (Bass Strait) on March 21—exactly 72 hours after the major Queenstown airburst.
As we know, Beaked Whales are deep-divers and highly sensitive to acoustic and pressure anomalies. If an airburst over the Tasman creates a focused "thump" of low-frequency pressure, these are the species most likely to show signs of disorientation first.
A distress flare was sighted off Flinders Island. 8:15pm on Saturday 21st March 2026, a member of the public reported seeing the flare off the western side of the island near Prime Seal Island. This report at 8:15 PM on Saturday occurred in the middle of the "Puppis" meteor activity window. Meteor reports and flares go side by side in the history of meteor reporting.
I'll keep looking for the smoking gun.
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