A military blimp is seen over Bloomsburg, Pa., on Oct. 28, 2015. (Credit: Mandy Morgan)

WASHINGTON (CBSNewYork/AP) — An unmanned Army surveillance blimp that broke loose from its ground tether at a military base in Maryland on Wednesday and drifted over central Pennsylvania has been secured by authorities.

The blimp is on the ground near Moreland Township, Pennsylvania, according to an official tweet from NORAD & NORTHSCOM. A military recovery team is en route to retrieve it.

JLENS is on the ground, located near Moreland Township, Penn. The authorities have secured the area and military recovery team is enroute. — NORAD & USNORTHCOM (@NoradNorthcom) October 28, 2015

Two Air Force fighter jets tracked the blimp as it floated over Pennsylvania. The blimp’s long tether snapped power lines, causing outages.

The North American Aerospace Defense Command in Colorado said the blimp detached from its station at Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, at about 12:20 p.m., and initially traveled north at an altitude of about 16,000 feet.

State police in Columbia County, Pennsylvania, confirmed they had been getting 911 calls about blimp sightings, but they could not provide additional details.

Witnesses reported seeing the blimp drifting between Jerseytown and Turbotville, a sparsely area north of Harrisburg. Its tether was snapping power lines.

The local electric utility, PPL, reported about 20,000 customers without power in the area, although it was unclear how many could be attributed to the blimp. Bloomsburg University canceled classes, citing a “widespread power outage.”

The blimp is the kind used extensively in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars to provide ground surveillance around U.S. bases and other sensitive sites.

“My understanding is, from having seen these break loose in Afghanistan on a number of occasions, we could get it to descend and then we’ll recover it and put it back up,” Defense Secretary Ash Carter said in a brief exchange with reporters at the Pentagon. “This happens in bad weather.”

Carter did not say what the two F-16 fighters tracking the runaway blimp might be asked to do or whether he considered it a threat to aviation.

The F-16s were launched from the Atlantic City Air National Guard Base in New Jersey, according to the NORAD statement.

FAA officials were working with the military to ensure air traffic safety.

The aircraft is known as a Joint Land Attack Cruise Missile Defense Elevated Netted Sensor System , or JLENS, and can be used as part of a missile defense system.wb

It was not immediately clear how the blimp came loose.

CBS News reported in February the type of unmanned blimp is nearly as long as a football field and is being tested to scan the sky for incoming cruise missiles.

Twitter, meanwhile, was having fun with the story.

A #Blimp is flying around? Boring. Talk to me when a blimp drags a slice of pizza around the subway. — David Shiffman (@WhySharksMatter) October 28, 2015

There's a NORAD #blimp on the loose flying over PA. Time to be the hero… pic.twitter.com/0PIoaKmIN9 — Jake Sitler (@jakesitler) October 28, 2015

my proposed hashtag for the runaway surveillance blimp is #BlimpinAintEasy — Yan⚠ (@bcrypt) October 28, 2015

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