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1 posted on
12/19/2005 1:51:25 PM PST by
BigTex5
To: BigTex5
Folks, including the US Military, have been trying to figure this out for a long time, along with the "spook" lights near Joplin, MIssouri.
2 posted on
12/19/2005 1:57:41 PM PST by
Jeff Head
(www.dragonsfuryseries.com)
To: BigTex5
3 posted on
12/19/2005 1:59:02 PM PST by
BuglerTex
To: BigTex5
Heck fire...those Marfa lights are easy. It's some good ol' boys drivin around in their F150 after eating several burritos each. Every once in a while, they stop, light a few farts, then move on down the road.
It's fun, harmless, and kills some time.
4 posted on
12/19/2005 2:00:36 PM PST by
MineralMan
(godless atheist)
To: BigTex5
When they figure it out they can come to NC and check out the Brown Mountain lights.
5 posted on
12/19/2005 2:01:05 PM PST by
bert
(K.E. ; N.P . Slay Pinch)
To: BigTex5
http://www.tsha.utexas.edu/handbook/online/articles/MM/lxm1_print.html
MARFA LIGHTS. The Marfa lights are visible every clear night between Marfa and Paisano Pass in northeastern Presidio County as one faces the Chinati Mountains. At times they appear colored as they twinkle in the distance. They move about, split apart, melt together, disappear, and reappear. Presidio County residents have watched the lights for over a hundred years. The first historical record of them recalls that in 1883 a young cowhand, Robert Reed Ellison, saw a flickering light while he was driving cattle through Paisano Pass and wondered if it was the campfire of Apache Indians. He was told by other settlers that they often saw the lights, but when they investigated they found no ashes or other evidence of a campsite. Joe and Sally Humphreys, also early settlers, reported their first sighting of the lights in 1885. Cowboys herding cattle on the prairies noticed the lights and in the summer of 1919 rode over the mountains looking for the source, but found nothing. World War Iqv observers feared that the lights were intended to guide an invasion. During World War IIqv pilots training at the nearby Midland Army Air Fieldqv outside Marfa looked for the source of the elusive lights from the air, again with no success.
Those who have viewed the lights over a long period personify them and insist that they are not only harmless but friendly. Mrs. W. T. Giddings, who grew up watching the lights and whose father claimed he was saved from a blizzard when the lights led him to the shelter of a cave, considers the lights to be curious observers, investigating things around them. Over the years many explanations for the lights have been offered, ranging from an electrostatic discharge, swamp gas, or moonlight shining on veins of mica, to ghosts of conquistadors looking for gold. The most plausible explanation is that the lights are an unusual phenomenon similar to a mirage, caused by an atmospheric condition produced by the interaction of cold and warm layers of air that bend light so that it is seen from a distance but not up close. In recent years the lights have become a tourist attraction. The Texas State Highway Department has constructed a roadside parking area nine miles east of Marfa on U.S. Highway 90 for motorists to view the curious phenomenon.
12 posted on
12/19/2005 2:18:26 PM PST by
HuntsvilleTxVeteran
(Giving power and money to Congress is like giving liquor and car keys to teenage boys. - P.J. O'Rour)
To: BigTex5
One the Mekong River near Nongkhai, Thailand, a similar phenomenon has become a real money maker for the locals. I sat out at the right time of the year (Fall -- October) two years ago and saw nothing but perhaps I didn't drink the requisite amount of Lao whiskey.
13 posted on
12/19/2005 2:19:25 PM PST by
JimSEA
(America cannot have an exit strategy from the world.)
To: BigTex5
I used to live in Alpine many moons ago and people were always coming there to figure out a scientific explanation for them then. We used to ride out and look at them just for something to do.
To: BigTex5; KevinDavis
15 posted on
12/19/2005 3:48:26 PM PST by
Angelas
To: BigTex5
I'm not trying to put UTD down, I've known some really nice and intelligent people who went to school there. But let's face it, this isn't a case where graduate students from M.I.T. are being sent to investigate the speed of light. If these guys see funny lights in the night sky I will still be skeptical.
16 posted on
12/19/2005 4:04:11 PM PST by
KarinG1
(Some of us are trying to engage in philosophical discourse. Please don't allow us to interrupt you.)
To: BigTex5
I saw them a couple of years ago when my husband and I went through Marfa. I was a real skeptic when we parked at the roadside area around dusk. They look about the size of big balloons, white, red, come together, then split apart, dancing and jumping around. There are a number of them. Still get chills when I think about them.
17 posted on
12/19/2005 6:11:13 PM PST by
Hattie
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