Giddierone
Senior Member.
In 1868 there was a large meteor shower visible over two nights, 13-14 November, from the East coast of the US and also Britain.
There's a lot of newspaper clippings about it at the time with reports from various locations. Just one example: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/...teor+&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1
and there's an illustration published years later in 1882 by Etienne Trouvelot that depicts one object making a sudden sharp change of direction — which is, of course, a common description of UFOs.
Source:https://ia902804.us.archive.org/20/items/TrouvelotAstronomicalDrawings/12 The November meteors. As observed between midnight and 5 o'clock A.M. on the night of November 13-14 1868..jpg
It has this interesting description:
It's interesting because this kind of odd movement of a light source has been discussed here before, and is usually down to tripod shake or some other camera issue. However, this is a hand drawn illustration so that shouldn't be the explanation for the single object that takes a sharp change of direction—which is not how meteors work.
This reminds me a little of the Chiles-Whitted UFO case where two pilots saw an object (thought to be a meteor) apparently ascend rapidly in an un-meteor like manner.
I wonder if this is a misperception; the after-image of seeing a bright meteor while looking around / moving eyes over the sky. Is that the reason this sharp angled track appeared in the illustration and was reported as making that movement? Or, perhaps the illustration is actually based on a long exposure photo from the early days of photography and the illustrator has committed to reproduce it faithfully, but inaccurately.
There's a lot of newspaper clippings about it at the time with reports from various locations. Just one example: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/...teor+&y=0&x=0&dateFilterType=yearRange&page=1
and there's an illustration published years later in 1882 by Etienne Trouvelot that depicts one object making a sudden sharp change of direction — which is, of course, a common description of UFOs.
Source:https://ia902804.us.archive.org/20/items/TrouvelotAstronomicalDrawings/12 The November meteors. As observed between midnight and 5 o'clock A.M. on the night of November 13-14 1868..jpg
It has this interesting description:
It's interesting because this kind of odd movement of a light source has been discussed here before, and is usually down to tripod shake or some other camera issue. However, this is a hand drawn illustration so that shouldn't be the explanation for the single object that takes a sharp change of direction—which is not how meteors work.
This reminds me a little of the Chiles-Whitted UFO case where two pilots saw an object (thought to be a meteor) apparently ascend rapidly in an un-meteor like manner.
I wonder if this is a misperception; the after-image of seeing a bright meteor while looking around / moving eyes over the sky. Is that the reason this sharp angled track appeared in the illustration and was reported as making that movement? Or, perhaps the illustration is actually based on a long exposure photo from the early days of photography and the illustrator has committed to reproduce it faithfully, but inaccurately.
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