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75 results for "atmospheric anomaly" — page 1 of 4
O_2_18 — Ball Lightning and Earthquake Lights: Anomalous Atmospheric Luminosities
Ball lightning and earthquake lights (EQL) represent two of the most enduring unsolved problems in atmospheric and geophysics. Ball lightning — luminous spheres typically 10–50 cm in diameter, persisting for seconds to m
G_4_03 — Ball Lightning, Earthquake Lights, and Anomalous Atmospheric Phenomena
Ball lightning — glowing, roughly spherical objects that float through the air, pass through walls, and sometimes explode — has been reported for centuries by thousands of witnesses, including scientists, airline pilots,
O_1_13 — South Atlantic Anomaly: Geomagnetic Weakness and Radiation Belt Gap
The South Atlantic Anomaly (SAA) is the largest known weakness in Earth's magnetic field, centered over South America and the South Atlantic Ocean (roughly between Brazil and southern Africa), where the inner Van Allen r
O_1_22 — Atmospheric Electricity & Sprite Phenomena
Atmospheric electricity encompasses the entire electrical system of Earth's atmosphere — from the fair-weather electric field (~100–150 V/m at the surface, maintained by the ~2,000 concurrent thunderstorms globally) to t
I_1_05 — The Scientific Study of Anomalous Atmospheric Phenomena
A range of rare atmospheric phenomena — ball lightning, earthquake lights, transient luminous events (sprites, elves, blue jets), and persistent luminous anomalies such as the Hessdalen lights — have been observed for ce
O_1_12 — The Hum: Worldwide Low-Frequency Acoustic Anomaly
"The Hum" refers to a persistent, low-pitched, droning noise perceived by a small but significant percentage of the population (estimated 2–11% depending on the locality and study) in diverse locations worldwide. The Hum
O_1_04 — Atmospheric Anomalies — Ball Lightning, Hessdalen, and Earthquake Lights
The atmosphere produces a range of luminous phenomena that, despite centuries of observation and thousands of documented reports, remain incompletely understood or only recently explained. Ball lightning — glowing sphere
O_1_19 — Naga Fireballs
The Naga fireballs (bung fai phaya nak, บั้งไฟพญานาค, literally "Naga sky rockets") are glowing orbs reported to rise from the Mekong River in the Nong Khai Province of northeastern Thailand (and the opposite Laotian ban
O_3_16 — Underwater Anomaly Catalog
Underwater anomalies range from confirmed submerged archaeological sites (Pavlopetri, Dwarka, Heracleion) to ambiguous geological/archaeological features (Yonaguni, Bimini Road, Baltic Sea Anomaly) to outright unexplaine
R_1_09 — The Great Oxidation Event: Oxygen, Cyanobacteria, and Earth's Atmospheric Transformation
The Great Oxidation Event (GOE), occurring approximately 2.4–2.1 billion years ago during the Paleoproterozoic, was the most dramatic chemical transformation in Earth's history — atmospheric oxygen rose from trace levels
ZF_1_12 — El Niño and ENSO: Pacific Oscillation and Global Climate Impact
The El Niño–Southern Oscillation (ENSO) is the most powerful year-to-year climate fluctuation on Earth — a coupled ocean-atmosphere phenomenon centered in the tropical Pacific that affects weather patterns, agriculture,
O_1_18 — Ball Lightning and Earthquake Lights: Transient Luminous Phenomena
Ball lightning — a luminous, roughly spherical phenomenon observed during or near thunderstorms, typically 10–50 cm in diameter and lasting 1–10 seconds — and earthquake lights (EQLs) — luminous atmospheric phenomena obs
O_2_21 — Boiling River of the Amazon
The Shanay-timpishka (from the local Asháninka language, meaning "boiled with the heat of the sun") — commonly called the Boiling River — is a 6.24-kilometer-long stretch of the Pachitea River tributary in the Huallaga r
O_2_17 — Ball Lightning and Plasma Physics: Transient Luminous Phenomena
Ball lightning — a luminous, roughly spherical phenomenon occurring during or near thunderstorms, typically 10–50 cm in diameter, persisting for seconds to minutes, and sometimes reported to pass through solid barriers o
I_3_20 — USO Underwater Base Claims & Evidence
Unidentified Submerged Objects (USOs) — anomalous craft or phenomena observed entering, exiting, or operating beneath bodies of water — represent a distinct subcategory of UAP reports that gained significant official att
M_5_03 — Piri Reis Map and Cartographic Anomalies
The Piri Reis map is a fragment of a world map drawn on gazelle parchment by the Ottoman admiral and cartographer Piri Reis (Ahmed Muhiddin Piri) in 1513 CE, rediscovered in the Topkapi Palace library, Istanbul, in 1929.
M_4_09 — Younger Dryas Impact and Lost Civilization Hypothesis
The Younger Dryas Impact Hypothesis (YDIH) proposes that a cosmic impact or airburst event approximately 12,800 years ago (12.8 ka BP) triggered the Younger Dryas cold reversal — a ~1,300-year return to near-glacial cond
ZH_5_10 — Naked-Eye Observational Limits: Precision, Techniques, and Ancient Achievement
For all but the last ~400 years of human history, every astronomical observation was made with the unaided eye. Understanding the limits and capabilities of naked-eye observation is therefore essential for evaluating anc
ZF_3_04 — USOs: Unidentified Submerged Objects and Trans-Medium Phenomena
Unidentified Submerged Objects (USOs) — anomalous craft or phenomena observed entering, exiting, or operating beneath the ocean surface — represent one of the most intriguing and least explained categories of unidentifie
ZF_3_11 — The Sargasso Sea, Bermuda Triangle, and Western Atlantic Anomalies
The Sargasso Sea is the only "sea" in the world defined not by coastlines but by ocean currents — a roughly elliptical region (~3.1 million km²) in the western North Atlantic, bounded by the Gulf Stream (west), North Atl
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