A house-sized rock was on track to crash into the southern city of Marseille on March 5, the fake reports, in French, said in widely-circulated tweets.
The French government and NASA -- abetted by the media -- were trying to hide the bad news from the public to avoid panic, the authors of the tweets claimed.
Like much spurious news circulating on social networks, these false reports contained a grain of truth.
On an astronomical scale, that's a close shave.
But there was absolutely no possibility, the US government scientists said, of an impact with mothership Earth.
In fact, the asteroid was just as likely to fly by more than 14 million kilometres away.
According to French radio station France Info, the hoax started with French video gamers trying to start a "trending topic" -- one of the most talked about topics of the day -- on Twitter.
While they may not have reached their goal, the hoax gained enough tweets during the weekend to reach nearly one million pairs of eyeballs on Twitter.
One user tweeted in English, presumably tongue in cheek: "I will leave France and go to Austria."
Many others, referring to a research centre in the US state of Arizona, tweeted: "According to the Catalina Sky Survey, 2013 TX68 Asteroid may hit Earth on French territory."
Some tweeted maps purportedly showing the asteroid's trajectory and the area of its expected impact -- saying that the meteorite's residue would shower debris as far as north Africa.
However, the possibility is "far too small to be of any real concern," NASA said reassuringly.
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