 Can a meteorite be tracked to where it lands? Yes. When a meteorite comes through the Earth's atmosphere, it makes a really bright fireball. And if we see that from a bunch of different directions, we can work out exactly where it is in the atmosphere and track it forward to where it lands on Earth. In practice, it takes loads of really cool, automated cameras out in the bush, masses of supercomputer time, and a really good knowledge of the Earth's atmosphere to work out exactly where the thing lands. And then a bunch of people can go out and if we're lucky, we can recover. It's an iron meteorite. Oh, my gosh. How does it feel to find your first DFN meteorite? Splendid!