This bolide was seen by many people on December 9, 1997 as it lit up the sky upon entry near Southern Greenland. It is predicted to have impacted in the snow fields near 61d 25' North and 44d 26'West and not far from the town of Qaqortoq. No physical evidence has been found so far, but many expeditions are planned to this region in the spring after the area becomes passable. It was pretty bright, however. A parking lot survalence camera in Nuuk, 600 kilometers away seems to have recorded the flash from this bolide off a car body. Weather satellite observations were reported to have seen an impact cloud over the site, but this was later found not to be a related event. The Norwegian Seismic Array recorded a 10 second event from about this area at the same time, but this was observed several minutes after the impact which is the wrong time scale for a shock wave to travel to the array from that region, and seismic stations in Greenland have not turned up any seismic events from their own backyards! For more information, visit the Dutch Meteor Society home page, also, the December 30, 1997 issue of EOS from the American Geophysical Union has an article about it.