The Aurora Borealis also know as Northern Lights light up the sky above the Gonfirth Loch in the Shetland Isles. The Lights are locally known as The Mirry-Dancers because of the way the light energetically 'dance' around the sky.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights. Curtain aurora observed from Greenland, 6 January 1861. Caused by high-speed particles ejected from the Sun, they are most commonly observed during periods of maximum sunspots. From Die Naturkrafte by M Wilhelm Meyer (Leipzig, 1903). Chromolithograph.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights observed from northern Norway, 10 October 1868. This luminous atmospheric electrical phenomenon is most spectacular at time of sunspot maximum. From Elementary Treatise on Physics, A Ganot, (London, 1906). Chromolithograph.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights. Caused by high-speed particles ejected from the Sun, they are most commonly observed during periods of maximum sunspots. From The Beauty of the Heavens by Charles F Blount (London, 1845). Coloured lithograph.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights, curtain form 1839. Observation made at Bossekop, Finmark, Norway, 19 January 1839. This luminous atmospheric electrical phenomenon is most spectacular at time of sunspot maximum. From The Forces of Nature, Amedee Guillemin, (London, 1872). Chromolithograph.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights observed from German and southern Scandinavia. Caused by high-speed particles ejected from the Sun, they are most commonly observed during periods of maximum sunspots. From Die Naturkrafte by M Wilhelm Meyer (Leipzig, 1903). Chromolithograph.
water reflections; lights in water; pub at night; watermans arms; pembroke; pembroke pembrokeshire; light reflections; street lights; street light reflections; reflections in water; people in pub; buildings at night; river reflections, colours in water,
Description
The Watermans Arms pub at night. Pembroke, pembrokeshire, Wales
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights observed from Guildford, Surrey, England, 14 October 1870. Caused by high-speed particles ejected from the Sun, the aurora are most commonly observed during periods of maximum sunspots. From Die Naturkrafte by M Wilhelm Meyer (Leipzig, 1903). Chromolithograph.
Aurora Borealis or Northern Lights observed from the Isle of Sky, Scotland, 11 September 1874. Caused by high-speed particles ejected from the Sun, they are most commonly observed during periods of maximum sunspots. From Die Naturkrafte by M Wilhelm Meyer (Leipzig, 1903). Chromolithograph.
Reykjavik Iceland Harpa Concert Hall and Conference Center Reykjavik Iceland Opera House arts culture cultural Iceland Symphony Orchestra Icelandic Henning Larsen Architects Olafur Eliasson Artec harbor harbour water boats twilight evening dusk stormy modern architecture glass