Space junk is raining from the sky. Who's responsible when it hits the Earth?
With more rockets launching each year, there's more risk of falling debris causing damage — or hitting someone
In March 2022, a couple living in the rural town of São Mateus do Sul, Brazil, were shocked to find a 600-kilogram piece of smashed metal lying just 50 metres from their home.
Four months later, two Australian sheep farmers found a strange, black object that appeared to have embedded itself in a field.
Then last week, a farmer in Ituna, Sask., found a similar object in his wheat field.
Alien invasion? Nope. All pieces of SpaceX debris that had fallen from the sky.
In the past, these events were rare. Instead, it was often said that because our planet is more than 70 per cent ocean, the chances of space debris reaching the ground in a populated area were slim.
While that is still largely true, the chances may be on the rise, said Cassandra Steer, the deputy director of mission specialists at Australian National University's Institute for Space.
WATCH | Saskatchewan farmer finds part of a SpaceX rocket in his field:
"The odds are increasing just because of the amount of space traffic that we are creating,"