When I first heard of the Marfa
Lights, I thought that we might is having high soaring creatures flying in and
out of sunlight in the high atmosphere long after sunset. This makes it something else.
The atmosphere is perfect here
for the generation of optical anomalies over great distances. It is also perfect for supporting nano sized
silica powder through electrostatic pressure.
This could easily produce an atmosphere well charged with silica dust.
After that any electrical stimulus
will produce bubbles that could glow and the apparent effects observed
including the drive through case. Up
drafts could then draw such object high into the atmosphere. It really is a form of rainbow type illusion
and it plausibly is also able to lens sunlight from below the horizon.
One immediately wonders if a
portion of UFO sightings could be similarly produced although the need for dry
air likely cuts that option except around here.
The brightness reported in some
instances remains a mystery but could also be the effect of lensing. And dust devils could well lend their energy
to forming bubbles into the still dry cold air..
Marfa's Mysterious Lights Viewing Area
It has been said that storytelling in Texas is really nothing more than one tall
tale after another with each participant trying to out-best the other. While
this may be true for the majority of the State, it is not true for the citizens
of the tiny town of Marfa .
They know their tall tale cannot be outdone. Their mysterious night orbs have
been investigated by so many reputable authorities and written into so many
scientific journals that they are guaranteed their own place in history
.
Along the Rio Bravo del Norte, which Americans call the Rio Grande , near the Big Bend in the river, lies the crown
jewels of the Southern Rockies . The majestic
Chisos, or "Ghost Spirit" Mountains, are famous as the backdrop of
the Big Bend National Park . To the northwest about
one hundred miles, in another part of the mountain chain at the gateway of the
Park, is the quiet little town of Marfa...home of the infamous "Marfa
Lights," lights which have become the longest running, hardest to explain
mystery in the history of the Lone Star State.
No one knows the exact sequence of events for the lights. That part of Texas has such a unique
history that the lights could have been there since the beginning of Time, and
probably were. But it is also just as possible that they winked into existence
in the past couple of centuries or so. There is really no way of knowing, as
Marfa lies on the high desert, or caprock escarpment, of the Trans-Pecos area
of the Tex-Mex border, a situation which contributes to spectacular viewing of
the night time sky all by itself. The Southern Rocky Mountains form the
backbone of this area, and the tiny town is the second highest in the
state---the highest is Fort
Davis ---with an elevation
of 4,688 feet. Like all high deserts, Marfa’s air is crystal clear and
incredibly clean. It is also unbearably hot in the summer and freezing cold in
the winter, a weather phenomena which helps build legends. Folks around Marfa
claim that on moonless nights, the stars are so close that one can pluck them
from the heavens and use them as torchlights.
Each cluster of peaks in this area bears its own name. Within the Big Bend National Park ,
there are the Chisos and Dead
Horse Mountains ,
also called the Sierra Del Carmen. Outside the Park to the north, the range
becomes the Christmas and Rosillos
Mountains . To the west
they are the Chinatis. They are all part of the same system, a system known as
the Chihuahuan Desert , which teems with distinctive
plant and animal wildlife unique only to itself. Yet for all its majesty,
mystery, and haunting beauty, it is the most remote and sparsely populated
region in Texas .
More legends are associated with this country than anywhere else in the State.
Marfa is the county seat of sprawling Presidio County, but it was not
always that way. Back in 1850, when the County was first created by combining a
Land District with a chunk of land from Bexar County ,
Marfa did not exist. In fact, only one or two small pockets of adobe buildings
scattered along the Rio Grande
constituted the only real towns for miles in any direction. Since the newly
created county became the largest in Texas , it
had to contend with government from neighboring El Paso County ,
which had all the population.
All that changed in 1854 with the United
States and Mexican Boundary Survey, which established the
International Boundary at the Rio
Grande . That year, the U.
S. Army built Fort
Davis to protect the supply trains
freighting between San Antonio and El Paso from the marauding
Comanche and Apache Indians. It soon grew into the first real town in the whole
County, and in 1875, because of its military and commercial connections, it
became Presidio County ’s official county seat.
Six years later, Marfa sprang into existence as a water stop on the old
Southern Pacific Railroad line between San Antonio
and El Paso .
Legend says that it was named after an exotic Russian heroine in the dime novel
a railroad magnate’s wife was reading as they passed through the area. Within
two years, it had a population of about two hundred people---and six times as
many cattle, horses, and sheep.
By the mid-1880’s, the Indian Wars were winding down, and folks became
suspicious that the military would abandon Fort Davis ,
which eventually did happen in 1891. They held an election in 1885 to move the
county seat from Fort Davis , tucked away in the Davis
Mountains , to the new town of Marfa,
out on the prairie, some twenty-five miles south, only many of the residents of
Presidio County cried fraud. They believed
Alpine, forty miles east of Marfa, had just as much right to be the new county
seat. The civilian population of Fort
Davis was not very
pleased with the election decision, either.
Back then, when most Texans were still wild and untamed, land feuds
usually culminated in some kind of war. The county seat argument flared for two
years---until the Alpine hierarchy snatched a huge chunk out of Presidio County for themselves. They called their
new County, Brewster. A year later, Fort
Davis mimicked Alpine and became the
county seat of Jeff
Davis County .
The once giant, sparsely populated Presidio
County thus became the
fourth largest county by area---and possibly the smallest by population. Even
today, it has just a little more than 6,500 residents. Marfa, the largest city
in the County, boasts a whopping population of 2,500.
No one knows for sure just when the legendary lights were first seen
flickering in the area. As early as 1840, wagon trains on the Chihuahua Trail
reported seeing unexplained lights along the flats. But no one ever dared to
investigate. The Trail ran eight hundred miles over the roughest country in
North America, beginning at Ojinaga , Mexico , and culminating at Indianola on the Texas Gulf
Coast . Apache Indians
were everywhere, and to stray off the Trail meant flirting with death. There
may be even older accounts still hidden in Mexican archives.
The first recorded Texan history occurred in 1883, when Robert Ellison
off-loaded his cattle in Alpine and drove them west through the Paisano Pass toward his ranch forty miles away
near Marfa. Camped at the base of the Pass, at a place now known as Mitchell
Flats, he saw strange lights in the distance. He was looking southwest toward
the Chinati Mountains , and he and his fellow
cowhands thought they were looking at the flickering flames of Apache
campfires. The lights appeared to be a few miles away and hovered just above
the ground.
The unexpected lights alarmed the cowboys, who thought the Apaches were
on the move, and they quickly doused their own campfires. But they determined
to investigate the area in the daylight. After spending an uncomfortable night
huddled under blankets for warmth on the cold desert floor, dawn found them on
horseback, combing the area for any signs of an Indian encampment. They found
none.
All day, the men searched along the base of the Chinati Mountains
and the mesa between their camp and where the lights had been. They found no
evidence that Indians had been anywhere in the area. No tracks, no doused
campfires, no nothing. But the next night and the next after that, they again
saw the strange lights. Cowboys kept seeing the lights night after night, week
after week, and year after year. All attempts at identifying them went
fruitless. Full of superstition, the cowboys finally decided the lights were
not man-made and began calling them "ghost lights."
The lights really do defy all attempts at explanation. Attempts to
locate their source always fail because they usually vanish when anyone tries
to approach them. People hike, ride horseback, drive jeeps, and even fly
helicopters and airplanes to follow the lights. Some have followed them as far
as thirty-five miles. The lights always win. Searchers have never found
campfires, buildings, tire tracks, footprints, or any other evidence that could
explain the lights’ sources. Some people even claim that the lights would
reappear, after they had abandoned the search and were miles away looking back
over their shoulders.
The lights can be seen in the southwest, across the Mitchell Flats near
Chinati Mountain, from an official viewing point on Highway 90 between Alpine
and Marfa. This viewing point was erected at the request of area ranchers, who
became tired of curiosity seekers disturbing their cattle, and they had a right
to complain. Just about every night, right before dusk, the parking lot fills
up with spectators equipped with everything from binoculars, cameras, and
camcorders to high-powered telescopes. And they are seldom disappointed. As the
sun sets, the lights appear, coming in all sorts of sizes, which climb in the
sky, then merge, split, or float back down. They change color, appearing green,
yellow, blue, and sometimes orange. One minute they will be bright, then fade
and disappear. They have even been reported between Paso Lajitas and San
Carlos, Mexico, and the Federales, who patrol the road for smugglers, have been
fooled into spotting what they thought were approaching headlights, only to
have no vehicle ever appear.
One long-time resident of the area, Hallie Stillwell, reported she
first saw the phenomenon when she was eighteen-years-old in 1916. Her home was
in Alpine, but she taught school in Presidio. That small town of sun-baked
adobe buildings squats in the shade of giant cottonwood trees lying along the Rio Grande about twenty
miles south of Marfa. What was current events to Hallie turned out to be old
stuff to the residents of Presidio. The town is more than three hundred years
old, having been founded along with Ojinaga across the river in Mexico
by the Spanish in the 1600’s. Everyone knew of the lights. They had seen them
in the winter, as well as the other seasons of the year, and nearly every
night. The lights always appeared to be moving erratically around the Flats,
winking and twinkling like fireflies in the night. This is one reason why most
believers rule out car headlights as the cause. For one thing, there were not
many cars in 1916 and none in the 1880’s, when the first official recording was
made.
Describing Marfa’s mysterious lights is all but impossible. They appear
as distant bright lights on the Mitchell Flats and are distinguishable from
ranch lights and automobile headlights on nearby Highway 67, between Marfa and
Presidio, by their aberrant movements and behavior. They appear and disappear,
veering and cavorting suddenly in odd directions. One moment there might be
one, and just as suddenly, it might split into two or three or more, dividing
and merging at whim. They hover in mid-air and sometimes flicker like balls of
fire. They might shoot straight up into the sky, or race madly to the left and
right. The color is predominately greenish-yellow, but they also are white and
shades of pastel. "I do not know how anyone could mistake them for car
lights," reported Sandy Sturdivant, an eyewitness in 1984.
The only thing certain about the Marfa Lights is that nothing is
certain. As the town grew, the locals became accustomed to seeing the strange
lights flickering in the distance and ignored them, but newcomers to the area
remained intrigued. During the period of Pancho Villa, and also later in World
War I, Army observers saw the lights and immediately jumped to the conclusion
that they were some sort of spotlights set up to guide an invasion force
into the United States from the south. The Army’s recorded observations brought
the lights to the attention of people outside the immediate area, but not
enough to garner any real public interest. The legend just continued as
"ghost lights."
It was 1943 when the mysterious lights were given a real boost in
publicity. That year, the Army established a pilot training base in Marfa.
Fritz Kahl, an airman at the base, who later stayed to run the Marfa airport,
reported that when the airmen saw the lights for the first time, there was
absolutely no vehicular traffic at night. In fact, fuel was rationed, and
lights themselves were a phenomenon because there were no lights of any kind,
not even on the local ranches. Kahl described seeing something that was totally
foreign to anything in and around the air base. He said finding the lights’
origins was like trying to catch a rainbow. When officials inquired of the
phenomenon with the area residents, the locals simply said, "Yeah, we got
ghost lights. So what?"
Over the years, explanations for the mysterious lights have ranged from
ball lightning to St. Elmo’s fire to dead Indians, ghosts, tricks, static
electricity, combustible dust, bat guano, solar activity, electromagnetic
energy, volcanic activity, biological luminescence, and UFO’s. There’s even the
glowing jackrabbit explanation. Under that theory, the jackrabbits race across
the desert with a coating of phosphorescent dust or glow worms clinging to
their hides. In the absence of a more definitive explanation, legend and
folklore have been known to sprout like tumbleweeds.
Fortunately, several of these theories can be discounted because they
don’t apply to the West Texas region. For
instance, while jackrabbits are abundant, phosphorous is not, and volcanic
activity in the area ceased about 30 million years ago. Also, although
jackrabbits are known for their speed, they are not known to fly or outrun
cars, and both pilots and motorists have reported being chased by the lights.
Still, the locals are convinced that there is more to the Marfa Lights
than first meets the eye. Native superstition seems to confirm it. The Indians
saw the lights long before any white man did. Their legends tell of the Great
Spirit, who made the mountains in the area by throwing all the jumbled rocks
left over from the creation of the stars, the birds and fishes, and the earth
itself, into a huge pile in the middle of the leftover wasteland. The Devil
then promptly claimed the rock pile and wasteland and turned it into hell,
adding things that bite, sting, or prick. When anyone died in that hell, the
lights became the spirits of the dead ones, who were thwarted in real life and
forced to wander the desolate world in search of kith and kin. The locals who
like this explanation also say that ‘it is a hell of a place that the Devil has
for hell.’
Other Native stories tell of the phosphorescent souls of brave
warriors, betrayed by treachery or killed in battle, and doomed to roam the
lunar-like landscape in search of justice or revenge. This has the classical
advantage of perpetuating myth into legend. Still another ancient Indian tale
came from the journal of O.W. Williams, grandfather of former Texas governor Clayton Williams. According
to the elder Williams, the lights are the ghosts of the Apache war chief,
Alsate.
Williams, who was a surveyor in Terlingua and other parts of the Big
Bend in the 1880’s, worked with a mostly Mexican crew from San Carlos, Mexico,
located across the Rio Grande from the ghost town of Lajitas, Texas. One member
of the surveying crew, Natividad Lujan, always told stories around the
campfires, and Williams patiently recorded them in his journal. One morning,
Williams called attention to the beautiful sunrise. Lujan promptly called it
"the great spirit of Alsate" and regaled his rapt listeners with the
story of the last Apache leader in the Big Bend .
It seems that in the 1850’s and 1860’s, the Kiowas, Comanches, and Apaches
maintained friendly relations with the townsfolk of San Carlos and Presidio,
while at the same time raiding back and forth across the border into Mexico.
Alsate, like most Apaches, grew up believing this way of life to be normal. He
was of the Mescalero Apaches, also known in the Big Bend area as the Chinati or
Rio Grande
Apaches.
As Alsate grew into manhood, he became a great warrior and leader of
his people. But, his depredations into Mexico made him hotly sought after
by the Mexican Rurales. He and his tribe were finally caught and taken to Mexico City to stand
trial. Throughout the trial, and no doubt also through the help of the earnest
plea-bargaining from a close relative, he managed to talk himself free. He then
led his tribe back to the Big Bend country,
where he once again took up his thieving ways. He was caught again, only this
time, he was taken to Presidio and executed. His tribe was taken into Mexico
and scattered into slavery, by one’s and two’s, and the whole tribe was thus
destroyed.
After a time, a sinister rumor began to creep across the old frontier
of the Chisos Mountains and the Chinatis. Ranchers and
cowboys talked of seeing the ghost of Alsate. It came in the form of flickering
lights, and was seen in the old haunts of the Chinati Apaches. One man saw it
rolling up a rocky slope, another saw it stationary on a promontory of the Rio Grande . It appeared
often in the Chinati
Mountains and could be
seen as far south as the Chisos. The rumor finally became part of the folklore
of the area---that the "lights that some people see" is the spirit of
the dead Alsate.
Although mysterious lights can be seen all along the mountain range
from the Chinatis to the Chisos, they are most constantly seen on the high
desert plateau of Marfa. This has prompted many serious searches for the
lights’ source. The first such attempt appears to have been made by Walter T.
Harris just before the turn of the century. He was an employee of the railroad,
and with the help of several other employees, he used surveyor’s methods of
triangulation to plot the exact location of the night beacons. By his
calculations, the lights were behind the Chinatis, "deep in Mexico ,
and impossible to be seen from the spot where we had taken our readings!"
An unscientific method was tried in the 1980’s by Dallas journalist, Kirby Warnock. Warnock’s
family had settled in the Trans-Pecos region just north of Big Bend country
more than one hundred years ago, and he first saw the lights in 1963, when he
was eleven-years-old and his brother was eight. He and his brother decided that
the reason no one ever got close to the lights was because they used motor
vehicles, such as airplanes, jeeps, and cars. The two men thought that if they
headed out on foot across the desert, they just might be able to sneak up on
the lights.
One summer, they assembled their gear and a camera, and at dusk,
started walking. They tried for four hours to get close to the lights, but it
was like walking up to a mirage. The more they walked, the further the lights
moved away. Warnock reported that he thought the lights were "trying to
frustrate and thwart us. It was like they knew what we were doing and were
teasing us by staying just a little ahead of us." It is a fact that
distances are deceiving in the desert. The Warnocks could not tell if they were
looking at a light as big as a tire or one as big as a cantaloupe. They just
could not get close enough to get a good idea of how big the lights actually
were.
Local lore also has a way of turning into local legend. Supposedly,
during World War II, pilots training at the old air base dropped sacks of flour
to mark the lights’ location. It is a story that has been told so many times
and in so many variations, that it long ago achieved the semblance of fact.
But, Fritz Kahl disclaims it. He has been either instructing at or running the
airport for the past forty years. If someone had flown out and dropped flour
sacks, he would have known about it.
It was in March 1973 that the legendary lights got a big boost of
publicity. Two visiting geologists appeared in the area to assess the
likelihood of uranium deposits for a big corporation. While parked in their car
on the Flats, they were startled by the sudden appearance of two similar balls
of light. The lights were about one-half the size of a basketball, and they
darted behind some bushes and in front of others, always hovering a few hundred
feet away before they blinked out. Coming from the scientific community as it
did, all sorts of people sat up and took notice. Theories begin to multiply
tenfold.
It is a known fact that triboluminescence is light resulting from
friction at the surface of certain crystalline materials, such as quartz, and
quartz is abundant in the area. Under pressure, it creates an electric current
called piezoelectricity. The current is capable of ionizing the air into
visible luminosities. Piezoelectricity also might ignite gases escaping from
sedimentary rock along fractures lines. The gas explanation is reinforced by
the history of the Cienaga
Mountains . Cienaga is
Spanish for "marsh" or "swamp." In the past, the area was
wetter and may have produced natural gas. Gas has been found in the Casa Piedra
area, south of Marfa, near the Cienaga
Mountains . One pilot even
reported a patch of phosphorescence the size of a football field, as he flew
over the Mitchell Flats at night, and phosphorescent gases can produce
luminescence without ignition. So, scientists argue, with the severe heating
and cooling of the Earth’s surface in the area, as well as seismic activity,
might not there be all sorts of friction along the fault lines?
Locals really do laugh about all the scientific theories that crop up,
especially since the lights appear to have minds of their own and do all sorts
of crazy things which defy explanation. For instance, believers argue, science
can be described in terms of either black or white…either it is or it isn’t.
How then does science explain all the shades of gray that the locals
experience? There is absolutely nothing cut and dried about the lights. Some of
the bizarre stories involve lights chasing or scorching cars, jeeps, and
trucks. Some claim cars melt and their occupants disappear, go into shock, or
turn into babbling idiots who are put away in sanitariums. There is even the
tale that the lights are a government laser weapon project that went awry.
Several years ago, the operator of a Marfa gas station had to make a delivery
to Presidio late at night. It was close to midnight, as he drove through the
Chinatis. "Suddenly there was this big blue ball of light a few feet off
the road right in front of me," Hector Escobedo said. "I slammed on
my brakes, but it did not move. I decided to keep driving, but it was so
bright, I had to shade my eyes to see the road." The light stayed right in
front of him for several miles, miles where the highway never once formed a
straight line, as it twisted and turned around the rocks and peaks of the
mountain pass. As suddenly as it came, it disappeared. "I was never so
scared in my life. I do not drive through there at night anymore."
The case file contains thousands of reports from ordinary citizens just
like Hector, who have seen the legendary lights. Even celebrities have gotten
into the spirit. In 1955, when film crews were in Marfa making the movie Giant,
which starred Elizabeth Taylor, James Dean, and Rock Hudson, James Dean mounted
a small telescope on a fence post to better spy on the lights, should they
suddenly pop up.
Because the phenomena is so well-recorded and remains yet unsolved,
there have been many serious investigations by individuals and small groups
attempting to explain the lights. One of the best known and recorded came in
March 1975. Don Witt, then a physics professor at Sul Ross University in Alpine, coordinated a
monumental effort to locate the lights’ source. Using the Sul Ross Society of
Physics Students, the Big Bend Outdoor Club
comprised of community members, and local pilots, short-wave radio amateurs,
and a few outside professionals, Witt’s group was positively unable to form any
sort of solid conclusion. They did say, however, that sometimes the lights that
people claimed were "Marfa Lights," were really artificial lights
from area ranches or automobile headlights merely passing behind unseen
obstructions along distant Highway 67, which winds through the Chinati Mountains between Marfa and Presidio.
The findings created an uproar in the otherwise sleepy little town of Marfa . Highway 67 was
twenty-four miles away and well below the horizon, eyewitnesses pointed out.
And even if the lights were headlights, it had to be traffic from Presidio to
Marfa, or traffic moving left to right, since anyone going from Marfa to
Presidio would show only taillights. Furthermore, they maintained, the lights
also move from right to left which, if the scientists’ theory were to be
accepted, indicated a crazy person backing up on Highway 67 at a high rate of
speed on a dark night on a treacherous mountain road in order to make the
right-to-left kind of movements that the mystery orbs have been known to make.
It was preposterous.
The eyewitnesses also ruled out the scientists’ artificial "ranch
lights" theory. With only one ranch in the area with only one
spotlight---a spotlight easily recognizable to the naked eye and, therefore,
discounted as a legitimate sighting---there was no way ranches played any role
in the matter.
Then, a sighting occurred in 1985 which appeared to succeed in wiping
out the car headlight theory...at least, that’s the claim. Robert Black, a
graduate student in geology at Sul Ross University, decided to climb Goat Mountain
south of Alpine for rock samples. On the Saturday after Thanksgiving, he and a
friend drove out a county road east of Marfa, parked their truck, and hiked in.
It was early in the morning on an exceptionally warm day for the mountains at
that time of year, and both men were dressed in light-weight clothing.
After collecting rock samples, Black’s friend, who loved sunsets,
commented, "This is going to be a beautiful sunset, isn’t it. Look, the
sun’s going down." At that moment, Black realized that they had stayed longer
on the climb than he had intended. They would have to really hurry to make it
out before dark.
Breaking into a run, they spied the truck way off on the Flats, but
distances are deceiving in the desert, and before they could reach the truck,
the sun was down. They were on the west side of Goat Mountain ,
in the middle of the Mitchell Flats. Black says it best, "Anyone who knows
the Marfa flats, knows that it is flat, featureless, and boring---no geological
marker out in the sea of desert and really no way to find your way around,
especially in the dark." The men wisely decided to spend the night where
they were. To keep warm, they gathered creosote bushes for fires.
A little before midnight, as they huddled around the fires looking
toward the north and northwest in the direction of Highway 90, their talk
turned to the Marfa Lights. The men were right in the Flats, where the lights
were normally seen, and they began to hope the lights would make an appearance.
They didn’t have long to wait. Shortly after midnight, they saw a
"horizontal length of light that had a sort of dancing vibration
movement." As the men watched in fascination, the "little beams of
light danced up and down in a kind of wave formation, moved across, jumped
straight up vertically, came back down, danced horizontally, then
disappeared." They saw the lights four or five times that night.
Black’s account was unusual because it was the first reported sighting
of the lights from a location several miles south of Highway 90 and looking north
toward Highway 90. The Chinati
Mountains were to their
backs. It ruled out any supposition of car headlights in the mountains as being
the cause of the mystery lights. Since Black and his companion were between the
Chinati Mountains and Highway 90, and the lights
appeared between the men and the highway, skeptics were forced to rethink their
previous positions.
There is even another recorded incident of the brilliant orbs
communicating with one of the local ranchers. Mrs. W.T. Giddens of Sundown,
Texas, reported that her father actually lived the adventure. According to her
story, her father was up in the Chinati
Mountains , looking for
stray cattle, when a sudden blizzard struck. Darkness, accompanied by howling
wind and blowing snow, reduced visibility to near zero. He was unable to see
his way home and had to feel his way along what he hoped was the right trail,
fearing he would soon freeze to death if he did not find shelter.
Rounding an outcropping of rocks, the panicked rancher stopped dead in
his tracks when some of the mystery lights suddenly appeared. Although he never
explained how they did it, the rancher claimed the lights "spoke" to
him, telling him he was three miles south of Chinati Peak, off course, headed
in the wrong direction, and dangerously close to a steep precipice. He was
advised to follow the lights---or die.
The lights led him to a cave that provided shelter from the raging
storm. The smaller lights left, but the larger light remained with him until
morning. According to the rancher, the light claimed they were "spirits
from elsewhere and long ago."
When the rancher awoke the next morning, both the light and the storm
were gone. As he headed toward home, he passed the outcropping of rocks and
discovered that when the lights had intercepted him, he had been on the edge of
a sheer cliff several hundred feet high. He had no doubts---the lights had
saved his life.
In July 1989, scientists from McDonald Observatory on Mount Locke
outside Fort Davis ,
and from Sul Ross University ,
decided to conduct another investigation into the lights. Included in the group
were a professor of chemistry, Dr. Avinash Rangra, and an astronomer, Dr. Edwin
Barker. With them were eleven other technicians and observers. Since the lights
are most frequently seen near the Chinati Mountains from Highway 90, which runs
east and west between Marfa and Alpine, the scientists decided they had best
rule out any misidentification of headlights on Highway 67, which winds through
the Chinati Mountains north and south between Marfa and Presidio.
A radio beacon resembling a red spotlight, visible in front of the
peaks, was used as a guide. In order to prevent the misidentification of
headlights, two marker lights were placed at the borders of Highway 67, where
it enters and leaves the mountain range. These marker locations were manned by
two technicians with radio equipment. Any lights spotted outside the markers,
which the scientists could not explain, would be identified as the ghostly
phenomena.
The investigators used special cameras and night-viewing equipment. At
midnight, an unknown light appeared past the right marker light in the middle
of the empty Mitchell Flats. Contacting the technician at the marker by radio
indicated there was no traffic on Highway 67. The ghostly globe was recorded on
a video camera. Observers were certain the light did not come from a man-made
source. It disappeared and came back and faded again.
Doctor Rangra confirmed that something of natural origin was occurring
over Mitchell Flats outside Marfa, but he did not know what. All he could say
for certain was that it was not man-made. Doctor Edwin Barker agreed. People
were seeing real activity in the atmosphere, but how to explain it? One
scientist thought the lights might be refracted starlight. Another believed
them to be illuminous gases produced by small earthquakes. But the fact is,
every one of the scientists in the investigation were not sure and could only
say for certain that it is a natural phenomena as yet unexplained by science. "Ha,"
the locals snorted, "we already knew that."
So, what are the mysterious Marfa Lights? Who knows? Theories are as
prolific as the skeptics are to the theories. There are some who think the
lights are caused by swamp gas escaping from underground pockets and igniting.
Well...maybe. Only there has not been a swamp in that part of Texas for thousands, perhaps millions of
years. What about St. Elmo’s Fire? Possibly, but not very likely. Saint Elmo’s
Fire only occurs when conditions are absolutely perfect. The Marfa Lights, on
the other hand, are seen year-round in all kinds of weather and under all sorts
of different atmospheric conditions. This seems to also rule out ball
lightning.
According to another theory, the lights might be a by-product of what
is referred to as the Novaya Zemlya effect,
which was first noted by the explorer Willem Barrents in 1597. Unlike the
normal temperature inversion layer, which forms a distinct reflective boundary
between warm and cold layers of air, the Novaya Zemlya
effect may involve several different layers or slices of atmosphere. This means
that a locomotive headlight between Ojinaga and Chihuahua, Mexico, could bounce
back and forth between varying layers of air and be seen as far away as Texas’
official "Marfa Lights" viewing site, located ten miles east of Marfa
on Highway 90. In a strange sort of way, this seems to corroborate the Walter
T. Harris surveying party’s conclusion conducted at the turn of the century, as
well as adding credence to the refracted starlight theory. The only real
problem with the Novaya Zemlya effect is that
the lights appear even on cloudy nights, which cannot possibly be considered
atmospheric reflections.
The real truth is that no one really knows for sure what causes the
Marfa Lights. The legends surrounding them just continue to expand, as more and
more research proves nothing. For the people of Marfa, who have grown up with
the lights, no explanation is necessary. They have them, and they mean to keep
them.
An interesting anecdote was recorded by researcher Dennis Stacy in
1989. It seems that Dr. Ray Hauser of Hauser Laboratories in Boulder , Colorado ,
wrote The Marfa Independent with an unusual request. He offered one dollar for
each used car air filter (up to ten) used in the area south of Marfa. The
filters had to have at least a thousand miles of wear and tear. Hauser wanted
to analyze the dust in the filters to see if there might be a connection
between the lights and the chemical composition and behavior of certain
dust-clouds. According to Stacy, "the idea sounds completely cock-eyed,
until one remembers that accumulated dust in grain elevators is capable of
tremendous explosive ignition."
With that in mind, one frustrated researcher was heard to mutter,
"Maybe the legendary Marfa Lights will turn out to be nothing more than West Texas dust-devils after all."
##################################################################
On December 6, 2010, researcher Jonathan David Whitcomb issued the
following press release:
For generations, the mystery lights ofMarfa ,
Texas , have entertained residents
with their strange dancing. On some warmer nights, a ball of light seems to
split into two, which will separate and fly away from each other before turning
around and flying back together. They have recently been linked to flying
lights in the southwest Pacific, lights that natives of Papua New Guinea testify are from
large flying creatures.
For generations, the mystery lights of
In southwest
Now a cryptozoologist from
According to Jonathan Whitcomb, a cryptozoology author in Long Beach, California, when one of the bioluminescent predators has been glowing for awhile, not far above the ground, it will be joined by another of its kind, which will then turn on its own glow. After insects have been attracted to that area, the two creatures will separate, which appears to distant human observers to be one light splitting into two. The predators will fly away from each other for some distance, then turn back and fly together. During the separation, bats may begin feeding on the concentration of insects before being caught from two sides by the larger predators.
Whitcomb was a forensic videographer, in 2004, when he traveled to Papua New Guinea, hoping to videotape the glowing nocturnal "ropen," said to be a large flying predator and scavenger. Although he did not see the creature, he interviewed many natives, who impressed him with their credibility and amazed him with what they had seen. Whitcomb became convinced that the ropen is a pterosaur, commonly called by Americans "pterodactyl" or "flying dinosaur."
After returning to the
He analyzed the eyewitness accounts of those flying creatures and wrote a nonfiction book: "Live Pterosaurs in
Although Whitcomb admits that Marfa Lights may come from an unknown bioluminescent bird or bat, he says, "It is more likely than not from a creature similar to the ropen of Papua New Guinea, and my associates and I are sure about the ropen: It is a pterosaur." - Jonathan David Whitcomb
NOTE: I have been reporting on Whitcomb's research and expeditions since I started 'Phantoms and Monsters'...in fact, he has forwarded several reports directly. This theory involving the Marfa Lights is interesting since much of the phenomena associated with the ropen of
A quick history of the Marfa Lights: The Marfa Lights in
Western Texas, nine miles east of Marfa, are arguably the most well-known
spooklights in the US .
Within driving distance of the McDonald Observatory, the Marfa lights have been
viewed for over a century. According to a State of Texas brochure, the first recorded sighting
was made by a rancher named Robert Ellison in 1883. Apache Indians thought them
to be stars that had dropped down to earth. Today they can been seen at night
by passersby who park in a pullover spot on Hwy. 90. They are described as
changing in color and intensity, and usually move about. Most skeptics believe
the Marfa Lights are nothing more than distant auto headlights on another
highway, but that doesn't explain the pre-automobile sightings. The town of Marfa even hosts an annual
Marfa Lights Festival every September. To read more, go to - Marfa's
Legendary Lights
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