A meteor shower lit up the skies above Europe, giving star gazers a rare opportunity to see a display of shooting stars with the naked eye.
"I think that everybody should see this," said Miralem Mehic, a Bosnian from an international group of star gazers who watched the light show at the Sand Pyramids - an area of naturally occurring sand columns - near the town of Foca.
The so-called Perseid meteor shower returns to the skies every August, and are best viewed in the northern hemisphere in isolated areas where there is little light pollution.
They arise when the Earth passes through the debris of Comet 109P/Swift-Tuttle, which was discovered in 1862.
Meteors are parts of rock and dust that hit the Earth's atmosphere, heat up and glow. Most vaporise as they descend, but some explode.
"This year the moon is young and will not obstruct the vision, so we will be able to see 100 'shooting stars' an hour," Muhamed Muminovic, a member of the Sarajevo Orion astrological society, told Reuters.
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Perseid meteor shower to shine in dark skies on Sunday night