Historical accounts from the largest electromagnetic storm ever recorded
It was September 1, 1859, and boy were people confused. The global telegraph system failed, telegraph paper spontaneously lit on fire, and the sky was filled with brilliant colors and patterns. The New York Times described it thusly: “alternating great pillars, rolling cumuli shooting streamers, curdled and wisped and fleecy waves—rapidly changing its hue from red to orange, orange to yellow, and yellow to white, and back in the same order to brilliant red.”
In the months shortly after the incident, newspapers and scientific journals found other possible causes. Scientific American postulated falling debris from active volcanoes, the San Francisco Heraldtheorized about “nebulous matter” from “planetary spaces,” and Harper’s Weekly settled on reflections from distant icebergs.
Ars Technica has collected historical documents recording the contemporary responses, including the above painting by Frederic Edwin Church, possibly a portrayal of the aurora. Click through to check it out.
(via sciencecenter)
Eyjafjallajökull (by Soffia Gisladottir)
(via definitelydope)
The Celestial Equator by lrargerich on Flickr.
(via the-rx)
Source: glover-outfitters
A lenticular cloud captured in 2002 looking southwest over the Tararua Range mountains from North Island, New Zealand.
via APOD
Uwe Langmann (b.1985, Germany) - Universal Comfort
First photograph of sunset on Mars, 2005
(via overdosage)
Comet Lovejoy (2011 W3) rising over Western Australia (by Colin Legg)
(via scipsy)









