Reports Report 1394d (Event 1394-2019)

Observer
Name M. V
Experience Level 2/5
Remarks I'm into Geology, not Astronomy, but have basic knowledge of meteorological events due to my research and trying to watch showers. This was DIFFERENT. At first glance my mind mistook the bright light as a street light, but a nanosecond later I realized it was falling, fast, and was blown away as I watched for about 8 seconds-start to finish. I've seen shooting stars, this was not. Fireball? Meteor? Spacejunk? I don't know, but it was something. My degrees on the maps are hopefully pretty close. I was driving (I verified my time in my location history on Google Maps for this report)and the 9:28pm time is close. If time needs to be adjusted I can confidently say between 9:28 to 9:38 pm. My location history setting is high accuracy, so I'm sure the :28 is within a few mins for sure, definitely not before. I emailed out local news team to see if It had been reported by anyone else, but they said no. I sure hope someone does :) Thanks for this site,
Location
Address Anamosa, IA
Latitude 42° 6' 29.6'' N (42.108221°)
Longitude 91° 17' 3.57'' W (-91.284324°)
Elevation 253.373596m
Time and Duration
Local Date & Time 2019-03-26 21:28 CDT
UT Date & Time 2019-03-27 02:28 UT
Duration ≈7.5s
Direction
Moving direction From up to down
Descent Angle 180°
Moving
Facing azimuth 309.41°
First azimuth 314.75°
First elevation 70°
Last azimuth 303.01°
Last elevation 25°
Brightness and color
Stellar Magnitude -9
Color Yellow/Golden
Concurrent Sound
Observation No
Remarks -
Delayed Sound
Observation No
Remarks -
Persistent train
Observation No
Duration -
Length -
Remarks -
Terminal flash
Observation Yes
Remarks The "flash" was more of a mild intensity In the brightness as it fell closer to the horizon, before it faded or kind of "winked out" very quickly
Fragmentation
Observation No
Remarks -