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Originally posted by kaylaluv
reply to post by Sublimecraft
And I'm assuming these rays would just fade away as the sun went down. I wonder why the person filming it didn't just keep filming until it got dark. Maybe he wanted people to think it was something paranormal?
Originally posted by Sublimecraft
OT: Where is your other Avatar?, she makes me smile
Originally posted by kaylaluv
reply to post by Sublimecraft
And I'm assuming these rays would just fade away as the sun went down. I wonder why the person filming it didn't just keep filming until it got dark. Maybe he wanted people to think it was something paranormal?
Originally posted by kaylaluv
And I'm assuming these rays would just fade away as the sun went down. I wonder why the person filming it didn't just keep filming until it got dark. Maybe he wanted people to think it was something paranormal?
Originally posted by Sublimecraft
They are Anticrepusular Rays - a very rare atmospheric phenomena.
Anticrepuscular rays are similar to crepuscular rays, but seen opposite the sun in the sky. Anticrepuscular rays are near-parallel, but appear to converge at the antisolar point because of linear perspective. Anticrepuscular rays are most frequently visible near sunrise or sunset. Crepuscular rays are usually much brighter than anticrepuscular rays. This is because for crepuscular rays, seen on the same side of the sky as the sun, the atmospheric light scattering and making them visible is taking place at small angles
They are the same as Crepuscular rays which:
are rays of sunlight that appear to radiate from a single point in the sky, specifically, where the sun is. These rays, which stream through gaps in clouds (particularly stratocumulus) or between other objects, are columns of sunlit air separated by darker cloud-shadowed regions. The name comes from their frequent occurrences during crepuscular hours (those around dawn and dusk), when the contrasts between light and dark are the most obvious. Crepuscular comes from the Latin word "crepusculum", meaning twilight.[1]
ETA: I see that others here have addressed this queryedit on 27-12-2012 by Sublimecraft because: (no reason given)
Originally posted by NahledgeEast
reply to post by Julie Washington
I've never seen anything like that before. It really made me wonder when the guy with the camera panned around and showed the sun on the opposite side. The first thing that came to my mind is maybe this is a glimpse of our second sun. Thanks for sharing...good find.
Originally posted by sled735
This is a message one of the members of the starseeds received from their "contact", Antwort:
Message Sunday, November 11 2012 (waking state, sent by our star sisters and brothers)
Monika: „What is important to know for our group regarding the upcoming “event”"
Antwort: „Pay attention to the light. It will tell you that it is beginning..."
Source:www.the-starpeople.net...?lang=de
under heading "ET Contacts", then the link:"Message from Dec 12"
Could this be the "light" that is the beginning of something these ETs are talking about?
Originally posted by trusername
Ummm is it just me or does the OP photos not look like the explanation of Anticrepusular Rays photos? The OP photo is a pretty defined beam and the Anticrepusular Rays fan out for the entire horizon.
Let's try throwing some more absolute explanations into the thread - they're always fun…