Western Australia and many other strange lights are explained in the thread and also here, officially. Please read it first before you accidentally ask about something that has already been explained!
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Does it? I'd say the interior of Alaska looks about the same as the interior of the Big Island.donalgary wrote:Why does Alaska appear much brighter than Hawaii?
donalgary wrote:
Why does Alaska appear much brighter than Hawaii?
DougK wrote:
I am intreged as to the origin of the huge number of lights in the central part of Western Australia and parts of South Australia and Northern Territory. These are either clearly anomolies or the spinifex faries must have been having a party.
mstabb wrote:
The outback of Australia is brighter than the rest of the country - yet effectively no one lives there. Consider the lights of Perth and Adelaide (each about 1M people) and Melbourne (4-5M) all outshone by a ton of places in Western Australia and Northern Territories. Something must be wrong there - is this map really made of photos, or some sort of "CGI" effect that got screwed up?
Agreed. I fly over this region often at 39,000 feet as a long haul pilot. The number of ground lights, once you cross the coast near Port Headland, and head inland is effectively nil. Something not right here.mstabb wrote:The outback of Australia is brighter than the rest of the country - yet effectively no one lives there. Consider the lights of Perth and Adelaide (each about 1M people) and Melbourne (4-5M) all outshone by a ton of places in Western Australia and Northern Territories. Something must be wrong there - is this map really made of photos, or some sort of "CGI" effect that got screwed up?
Agreed further. There is a further suspicious part about Western Australia - the vast majority of Western Australia's population is in the South West corner of the state. However, apart from Perth, there is no light showing in this area at all.Biggles wrote:Agreed. I fly over this region often at 39,000 feet as a long haul pilot. The number of ground lights, once you cross the coast near Port Headland, and head inland is effectively nil. Something not right here.mstabb wrote:The outback of Australia is brighter than the rest of the country - yet effectively no one lives there. Consider the lights of Perth and Adelaide (each about 1M people) and Melbourne (4-5M) all outshone by a ton of places in Western Australia and Northern Territories. Something must be wrong there - is this map really made of photos, or some sort of "CGI" effect that got screwed up?
But lil' ol' England is preggers.nujjer wrote:
The Mercator projection winds me up! I'm a Brit, and I always feel uneasy every time I see a map like this that shows lil' ol' England as much bigger than, say Florida, which has almost exactly the same area. Compare also the UK to India, which has about 12x the land area, and the idea of colonialism is difficult to put aside. Methinks Mercator (a Belgian, same latitude as the UK) was a self-publicist!
C'mon Florida, lets see a Floridator Projection!
I don't think wild fires can be the explanation for the Australian lights. Don't wild fires usually have a signature crescent shape?Ele6 wrote:For those who can't see the video above neufer posted, nor noticed the subject, the answer to the lights in Western Australia: wild fires.
Unless you have the misfortune of being a North Korean...test wrote:south vs north korea is hilarious