BBC Scotland Highlands & Islands Reporter
Network – which began in 2012 and includes over 200 amateur astronomers – uses observation, captured footage and computer programs to detect where the meteorite lands are to calculate classes and trajectory.
The small meteor was seen after midnight.
Ukman said that possible places for meteorites may be around Ben Nevis – Britain’s highest mountain.
Tony Hanlon told BBC Scotland News that he felt his house in a nearby Fort William Shake.
He said: “My husband and children, however, slept through it.”
Ray was living in a stable caravan with his dog’s rocky working in Glenn Nevis near White Ben Nevis, when he was shocked by meteor.
He said: “I could not sleep after a difficult day, so a coffee got up.
“I and the dog banged our skin with a blast.
“I missed the light because the curtains were drawn, but the entire static shakes were such as it was used as a drum or a vehicle hit the side.
“We both scared and left confused.”
‘Dark Going’
Ukman said that the meteor was traveling at about 12,427mph (20,000 km) when he entered the Earth’s atmosphere.
It was seen brightly burning as a full moon before it was “dark”.
Any information collected by wind and other weather figures, as well as any information collected by the UK’s fireball aligning, is used to help work on the land of meteorites.
Ukman has appealed to Hilwochers to be looking for meteorite pieces and advise on its website. How to identify space rock,
But the organization said that finding meteorites would be difficult in a vast area of ​​mountains and brightness.
Winchcombe meteorite was found on Britain’s soil for 30 years.
Experts said that the rock traveled for millions of years before reaching the Earth.