The Brown Mountain Lights

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The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby Jeff » Sun Mar 04, 2012 12:45 pm

N.C. county's mystery lights draw interest

By Tom Breen
Associated Press
Posted March 3, 2012 at 3 p.m.

RALEIGH, N.C. — Two orange orbs, just about 10 feet off the ground, floated past Steve Woody and his father as they hunted deer more than 50 years ago. The mysterious lights passed them, then dropped down the side of a gorge in the Blue Ridge foothills.

For at least a century, the Brown Mountain Lights have confounded residents and tourists in a rugged patch of Burke County, bobbing and weaving near a modest peak. Are they reflections from automobile headlights? Brush fires? A paranormal phenomenon, or something natural not yet explained by science?

"I didn't feel anything spooky or look around for Martians or anything like that," Woody said. "It was just a unique situation. It's just as vivid now as when I was 12 years old."

Whatever the explanation, tourism officials are hoping all those decades of unanswered questions add up to a boost in visitors making their way to scenic outlooks around Linville Gorge with the goal of spotting something mysterious.

Unexplained mysteries like the Brown Mountain Lights have been the subject of cable TV documentaries and have fueled vast online communities of amateur investigators. Ed Phillips, Burke County's tourism director, is hoping to capitalize on that.

Earlier this month, a sellout crowd of 120 paid $20 a head to attend a symposium on the lights at Morganton City Hall, and there was a crowd outside the door hoping to get in at the last minute.

"It's a good problem to have," Phillips said. "I could have sold 500 tickets."

Interest in the lights has waxed and waned since the first known printed reference to the phenomenon appeared in The Charlotte Observer in 1913. John Harden, a Raleigh-based radio personality, devoted an episode of his 1940s series "Tales of Tar Heelia" to the lights, saying they "not only have attracted the attention of the people of this state, but have aroused the curiosity of a nation as well." There also was a folk song, recorded by The Kingston Trio and others that posited the lights came from a slave wandering the hills with a lantern in search of his master.

...

The Brown Mountain Lights have drawn serious scientific interest since the 1920s, when the U.S. Geological Survey issued a report concluding the lights were reflections from automobiles, trains and brush fires.

Daniel Caton, a professor in the physics and astronomy department at Appalachian State University, thinks that's part of the explanation for what people have reported seeing over the years. But Caton thinks there's more to the lights, at least in some cases.

Caton said that about seven years ago, he was ready to give up studying the lights when he began hearing from people who said they saw them from mere feet away, not miles across the Linville Gorge. Those accounts sounded to Caton a lot like firsthand reports of ball lightning, a little-understood but naturally occurring phenomenon involving luminous spheres often said to move or bounce about in the air.

...

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2012/mar/03/ ... p-tourism/
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Re: The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby Wombaticus Rex » Sun Mar 04, 2012 4:49 pm

Our very own Hessdalen interval? Interesting...thanks for this.
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Re: The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby elfismiles » Sun Mar 04, 2012 8:22 pm

Draw interest indeed ... my pal Harry Ashburn posted an NYTimes article about them just a few days ago...

Mysterious Orbs Confound NC County for Decades
viewtopic.php?f=29&t=34095

Jeff wrote:N.C. county's mystery lights draw interest

http://www.vcstar.com/news/2012/mar/03/ ... p-tourism/
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Re: The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby sunny » Sun Mar 04, 2012 8:25 pm

This sounds like my mothers' UFO experience in the mid-60's. She would concede the possibility that it was ball lightning but you could tell she wasn't convinced of it.
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Re: The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby MacCruiskeen » Sun Mar 04, 2012 9:28 pm

The Brown Mountain Lights have drawn serious [sic] scientific interest since the 1920s, when the U.S. Geological Survey issued a report concluding the lights were reflections from automobiles, trains and brush fires.


"Reflections"? How? "Reflections" from "automobiles, trains and brush fires"? What, from all three? How does that work, exactly? How do these three very different things get "reflected" into balls of light that float past people's heads? (These people being adults who know their own locality, and who have, of course, frequently witnessed light from "automobiles, trains and brush fires" and who don't get unduly excited about such trivial everyday occurrences. But of course they're not brevetted scientists and therefore cannot possibly be perceiving anything real when they imagine they're perceiving something unusual.)

The U.S. Geological Survey's "explanation" doesn't just fail to explain anything; it's an instant, uncurious, pseudo-omniscient response that positively obscures the object of inquiry. This is where instititutionalised science becomes indistinguishable from institutionalised religion.
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

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Re: The Brown Mountain Lights

Postby jingofever » Sun Mar 04, 2012 11:35 pm

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