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What was that in the night sky? It’s a question being asked by many residents across B.C. and parts of Alberta after an unusual sighting Tuesday night.

Andrew Kurjata · CBC News
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What was that in the night sky?
It’s a question being asked by many residents across B.C.'s north and Interior, as well as parts of Alberta and Vancouver Island, after an unusual sighting Tuesday night.
Between about 10:15 and 10:30 p.m. PT, multiple residents, including this CBC reporter, reported seeing a large, white shape slowly move across the horizon before disappearing from view.
Videos have been posted by residents in community Facebook groups from Williams Lake to Prince George to Fort St. John, over a span of hundreds of kilometres. Reports of the sighting have also been received from the Nass Valley, Kamloops, Oliver, Vancouver Island and Sherwood Park, Alta.
Suggestions as to what it might be range from an errant weather balloon to something more out of this world. Another recurring speculation is plumes from the launch of SpaceX's Falcon 9 rocket, which could be seen earlier in the evening over California after it took off just before 9 p.m. PT from the Vandenberg Space Force Base.
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Michael Unger, director of programming at the H.R. MacMillan Space Centre in Vancouver, said while he didn't see the shape himself, based on video it didn't appear to be a natural occurrence such as a meteor or cloud cover.
"It certainly looks controlled," he said, while adding any guesses he could offer would be pure speculation.
Unger said instances of unidentified phenomenon sightings are becoming more and more common as night skies become more crowded by everything from drones to private satellites to rockets, operated by groups like SpaceX.
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"Those things are just more common in our society now," he said.
Unger also said there are more opportunities to film and share what people spot, a trend that is useful to scientists trying to track sky and space activity — such as when an apparent meteor lit up southern British Columbia a week ago.
"I think when we do get some of these instances, it sparks that curiosity of reminding ourselves that there is a lot up there that we're missing and we don't know," he said.
With files from Jessica Cheung
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