Authorities in Pennsylvania have said a military blimp that untethered from its mooring in Maryland and sent personnel scrambling for hours, is now down in the Keystone State.
NORAD spokesman Capt. Scott Miller confirmed to ABC News that the Army surveillance blimp was indeed on the ground in Montour County.
The JLENS blimp had drifted for hours and was the cause of a bit of havoc while it was in the air.
Columbia County Department of Public Safety Director Fred Hunsinger said that the unmanned aircraft, which is about the size of a football field, caused power outages in the area before it finally came down.
The chances of a blimp tearing loose from its tethering and ending up floating through the air like in this instance is rare.
"The chance of that happening is very small because the tether is made of Vectran and has withstood storms in excess of 100 knots," Raytheon, the producer of the balloon, said.
Raw video of the drifting blimp was captured by onlookers and posted on social media.