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The first and only known home video of the 1986 explosion of the Challenger space shuttle has surfaced, showing a horrifying new vantage point from the crowd as the aircraft blew apart in midair.

Jeffery Ault shot the Super 8 film footage while watching with the crowd at Cape Canaveral, Fla., that tragic day. He was a 19-year-old space geek at the time.

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The first and only known home video of the 1986 explosion of the Challenger space shuttle has surfaced, showing a horrifying new vantage point from the crowd as the aircraft blew apart in midair.

Jeffery Ault shot the Super 8 film footage while watching with the crowd at Cape Canaveral, Fla., that tragic day. He was a 19-year-old space geek at the time.

"The excitement leading up to the launch was something I had never felt before." Ault told The Huffington Post, the site he released the footage to after letting it sit in a box at his home for years.

In the video, the crowd doesn't appear to initially realize that the shuttle exploded as the sky lit up in flames. But later a voice over a loudspeaker can be heard saying, "The vehicle has exploded."

Six astronauts and a school teacher vying to be the first "citizen in space" died in the explosion.

A trip to the emergency room in a Long Island hospital now averages nearly 4 hours, data shows. NewsdayTV's Virginia Huie reports. Credit: Newsday Staff

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