Glowing orbs over Norway’s Hessdalen Valley, part of a light phenomenon scientists have monitored for years but still can’t fully explain.

    by Emotional_Quarter330

    27 Comments

    1. Emotional_Quarter330 on

      The Hessdalen lights are unidentified lights which have been observed in a 12km long stretch of the Hessdalen valley in rural central Norway periodically since at least the 1930s.

    2. CosmicEggEarth on

      Why haven’t they just swarmed with drones every light appearing?

      Place a drone every few feet, and as a light appears – just fly towards it at full speed, while sending back IR/4K/radar/lidar – whatever sensors you can fit on that drone.

      Has it been done? From every story about these lights I’ve seen it seems like they just stood on some hill looking across very large distances.

    3. Swamp gas from a weather balloon trapped in a thermal pocket reflected the light from Venus.

    4. Swamp gas! Oh, wait… ball lightning! Um… how about this: you saw nothing if you know what’s good for you peasant.
      -Sincerely, your local Federal agency. 🥰

    5. It seems the last time they were observed was sometime in 1998, according to wikipedia. Also, a Google image search shows mostly the same picture, so not a lot of instances documented.

    6. Helln_Damnation on

      There are metals in the underlying soils on both sides of the valley and under the right conditions cause a build up of electrical charge that results in the lights.

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