EARTHQUAKE LIGHTS PHENOMENON

Earthquake
clouds are clouds claimed to be signs of imminent earthquakes. They have been
described in antiquity: In chapter 32 of his work Brihat Samhita, Indian
scholar Varahamihira (505–587) discussed a number of signs warning of
earthquakes, including extraordinary clouds occurring a week before the
earthquake. In modern times, a few scientists claim to have observed clouds
associated with a seismic event, sometimes more than 50 days in advance of the
earthquake. Some have even claimed to accurately predict earthquake occurrences
by observing clouds.
An earthquake light is an unusual luminous
aerial phenomenon that reportedly appears in the sky at or near areas of
tectonic stress, seismic activity, or volcanic eruptions. Once commonly
challenged, it was not until photographs were taken during the Matsushiro
earthquake swarm in Nagano, Japan (which occurred from 1965 through 1967) that
the seismology community acknowledged their occurrence.
The lights are reported to appear while an
earthquake is occurring, although there are reports of lights before or after
earthquakes, such as reports concerning the 1975 Kalapana earthquake.
They are reported to have shapes similar to
those of the auroras, with a white to bluish hue, but occasionally they have
been reported having a wider color spectrum. The luminosity is reported to be
visible for several seconds, but has also been reported to last for tens of
minutes. Accounts of viewable distance from the epicenter varies, in the 1930
Idu earthquake, lights were reported up to 70 miles from the epicenter.
Earthquake lights were reportedly spotted in
Tianshui, Gansu, approximately 400 km north-northeast of the earthquake's
epicenter. During the 2007 Peru earthquake lights were seen in the skies above
the sea and filmed by many people. The phenomenon was also observed and caught
on film during the 2009 L'Aquila and the 2010 Chile earthquakes. The phenomenon
was also reported around the Amuri Earthquake in New Zealand, that occurred 1
September 1888. The lights were visible in the morning of 1 September in
Reefton, and again on the 8th of September.
Earthquake lights are caused by an unknown
mechanism. There are numerous theories as to how and why they occur.
One explanation involves intense electric fields
created piezoelectrically by tectonic movements of rocks containing quartz.
In : Saddest moments