One of my home
state’s most well-known unexplained phenomena was caught on camera
recently by a group of researchers from Appalachian State University.
The team has two cameras set up in the mountains near Morganton, North
Carolina trained on Brown Mountain. For over a century, witnesses have
reported strange orbs or streaks of light darting among the hills of the
Pisgah National Forest around Brown Mountain, but scientists have yet
to produce a definitive explanation for the phenomenon. Will we ever
solve the mystery of the Brown Mountain Lights?
The Brown Mountain Lights have been covered by North Carolina newspapers for decades,
and one of the earliest accounts of the Brown Mountain Lights was
published in the Charlotte Daily Observer in 1913. This most recent
sighting took place earlier this year when one of the cameras set up by an Appalachian State research team caught a few unidentified lights on camera. See the footage for yourself.
A picture of the lights from 1962.
While the video certainly shows a few ambiguous streaks of light, it sure does look a lot like the “rod” phenomenon
which occurs when cameras capture insects flying faster than their
frame rate. The result is that tiny insects can appear like massive
flying rods, which themselves have been the source of several studies
and paranormal claims. The fact that they are caused by flying insects
is still disputed by some.
Were these alleged Brown Mountain
Lights merely insects? Even the video’s author notes that they are
“likely lightning bugs but it’s winter.” The video was taken months
before lightning bug season in North Carolina, but that doesn’t mean
another insect couldn’t have reflected light from traffic in the
distance. In his YouTube description of the footage, Appalachian State
astronomer Dr. Daniel Caton
claims the lights were captured on two different cameras, but that the
second camera’s footage is unusable “due to camera quitting after a
storm.” It’s always the camera, isn’t it?
While many simple explanations for the
Brown Mountain Lights have been put forward over the years, they are
still considered a mysterious phenomenon and are somewhat rare. A few
friends of mine claim to have seen them inadvertently while camping, but
then there are those who have looked for them for years and have never
witnessed the lights. Still, reports and studies of other similar
unexplained Earth lights around the world lend legitimacy to reports of
the Brown Mountain Lights.
In Norway’s Hessdalen valley for
instance, witnesses have for decades reported strange orbs of light of
various colors that appear both by day and night. Possible explanations
include piezoelectric discharge due to underground conductive crystals
rubbing together, some unknown type of chemical combustion which can
occur under extremely specific conditions, or even by ionization of air
and dust caused by deposits of radioactive elements underground.
Unexplained illumination photographed over Table Rock, North Carolina (image by Bill Fox).
What could be causing these strange,
seemingly natural Earth lights? Are they indeed a natural phenomenon?
It’ll take a lot more than one blurry YouTube video to get to the bottom
of this mystery.
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