dru residency

April 22, 2010

earth lights, iridium flares and radio beacons

Filed under: ecology and environment, landscape, satellites, theory — hostprods @ 2:33 pm

I heard stories recently about the strange lights known variously as earth lights, will o’ the wisp, jack o’ lanterns or corpse candles, which traditionally vary from flickering glows seen hovering over bogs or other damp ground to enormous bright glows that can light up an area as if it was day, being seen regularly in the Longdendale area of the South Pennines. Apparently the area around Longdendale between Glossop and Crowden has been an area of many sightings of unexplained lights, including small glowing spheres dancing above car dashboards to ‘brilliant incandescent blue light’ that ‘lit up all the bottom half of the mountain, all the railway, the reservoirs and about a two mile stretch of road.’ (from Longdendale Lights). The lights have been commonly seen around the aptly named Shining Clough and the Devil’s Elbow on the Woodhead Road to Glossop.

Theories about what the lights actually are range from the inevitable UFO and supernatural connotations to marsh gases and tectonic electromagnetic activity. An automated monitoring system in Hessdalen, Norway where there has been a huge amount of earth light activity is still to deliver any concrete analysis and scientists such as Paul Deveraux and Michael Persinger have been working on the phenomenon for years.

This is the crux of the theory from wikipedia;

The theory goes that the strain causes heat in the rocks, vaporising the water in them. Piezoelectric rocks such as quartz then produce electricity, which is channeled up through this column of vaporised water, until it reaches the surface—somehow displaying itself in the form of earth lights. This theory would assert that the majority of earth lights are seen over places of tectonic strain. If it is correct, it would explain why such lights often behave in an erratic and even seemingly intelligent manner, often defying the laws of gravity. Paul Devereux’s explanation, however, is much broader. He thinks that the link between the lights and the landscape is more tenuous. He says that they are probably related to many things: tectonic strain, weather conditions, local geography, ‘ley lines‘, terrain, water table depth and so forth. This explanation, however, is rejected by most experts as highly unscientific.

A recently explained phenomenon of weird lights much higher up in the sky, and another previous UFO theory has been put down to iridium flares. The iridium satellites are part of a communications network and have the unique feature of 3 highly reflective aluminium antenna panels mounted 120º apart which reflect the sun when the satellite performs one of its preprogrammed turns.

Often these flares can be seen in daylight at a fairly high magnitude and there are several websites, widgets and applications that predict when and where these flares will be visible. Maybe the best of these, Heavenly Bodies, predicts that the next one visible from Huddersfield will be on 21st July at 19.07.23 hrs at 239º WSW and 71º elevation. This will be Iridium 35.

Some of my readings and research during this residency that has touched on GPS, messaging and radio communications has led me to want to place a network of small radio beacons on the trig points all over this region of the Pennines. These beacons will broadcast the encoded landscape information from samples taken from the site of the trig point. Maybe these transmissions could be triggered by photocells or other sensors picking up earth lights or iridium flares.

Originally posted – July 16th, 2007

Leave a Comment »

No comments yet.

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI

Leave a comment

Blog at WordPress.com.