Northern Lights Not So Northern
Several readers have written with news of an unusual display of the Aurora Borealis, among them Georgie Porgie, who writes: "Crawl away from those terminals and step out side for a view of the norther lights... I am in Columbia, Missouri, USA Approx 39.9 N latitude and I am looking at the northern lights... Hope the networks are up tommorow... See what causes the lights at http://www.spaceweather.com/"
fjordboy points to this excellent noaa.gov link, too.
More pretty pictures from the BBC
I just saw them from within Boulder, CO (40 degrees N latitude). Yes, from inside Boulder proper, despite the city lights. So darker sky sites should have better luck. They were pretty identifiable as a pale green glow to the north. Unfortunately, they appear to be fading, now. So go out now!
My brother-in-law can see it driving through the Ozark's about 50 miles south of Harrison, Arkansas. Says it covers much of the sky with orange and purple light.
Purty cool stuff.
I was out most of this evening ( and early night - 11:00 PM CDT), and i did not see the lights. I am in Duluth, MN (47 degrees N lat duluth 46 degrees N lat) - i must have missed them. =(
-- http://www.camulus.org/
the national geographic url is:
/ 11/01/html/ft_20011101.3.html
;) )
http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/data/2001
(gotta love html
Satanists get good grades too...suspiciously good grades
spaceweather.com has collected some pictures taken by amateurs Monday night.
From Alaska.edu:
Milalwi
Last night in Edmonton, Canada the Aurora was incredible. However that is nothing unusual since we get to see the Northern Lights all the time here in the north. Last night was the first time I've seen the light RED however. The normal green kind were visible but there was a hazy red type as well. The lights were not the normal shape either; they did not appear to "dance" but at time made a large arc across the whole sky, the dispersed to make a huge crown in the sky with the red and green parts overlapping each other.