No idea. Despite no confirmations yet on whether space debris was involved, it felt relevant to share because of the overlapping nature and time frames.
The whole of Western Australia is a mine site so it’s pretty much a sure thing for space junk to hit a mine site if it comes down anywhere in the half of Australia.
The standard advice is to keep your distance and contact the authorities. The debris can easily have low enough level of hypergolics to be unnoticeable, but high enough to cause health problems
https://viewfromthewing.com/did-space-debris-hit-a-united-fl...
More unconfirmed images here: https://img.pr0gramm.com/2025/10/18/90eed05d6c29e0ce.png
Do you think the two events are related?
No idea. Despite no confirmations yet on whether space debris was involved, it felt relevant to share because of the overlapping nature and time frames.
Why is it so impossible to get high quality images of anything space-related? Even when it re-enters and is photographed on Earth?
Because it is still covered in residual reality distortion shreds from the field which is camouflaging all the UFOs.
Kinda weird people don’t know this.
Weren’t they paying attention in school?
The whole of Western Australia is a mine site so it’s pretty much a sure thing for space junk to hit a mine site if it comes down anywhere in the half of Australia.
How could one tell if there were toxic hypergolic fuel residue in the debris?
The standard advice is to keep your distance and contact the authorities. The debris can easily have low enough level of hypergolics to be unnoticeable, but high enough to cause health problems
One wouldn't easily. But assuming it may is a necessary precaution. Hydrazine is common and harmful in rather small amounts.