Sunday, January 26, 2014

Pyramid in the Sky 1707

"III. An Account of a Pyramidal Appearance in the heavens, observed near Upminster in Essex, by the Reverend Mr. William Derharn, F. R. S.

Upminster, April 7. 1707.
 
The Afternoon of Thursday April 3. last, I devoted in some measure to the Service of the Royal Society, to take Angles, in order to finish my Observations about Sounds.  And as I was returning home, I perceived in the Western part of the Heavens, about a quarter of an Hour after Sun-set, a longslender Pyramidal Appearance, perpendicular to the Horizon.  the Base of this Pyramid I judged to be doubtless the Sun (then below the Horizon.)  Its Apex reache 15 or 20 Degrees above the Horizon.  it was throughout of a rusty red Color; and when I first saw it, pretty vivid and strong, but the top part fainter much than the bottom, nearer the Horizon.  At what time this Appearance began, whether at, or how soon after Sun-set, I cannot say, being at that time in a Friend's House.  But about a quarter of an Hour after Sun-set, as soon as I was gotten abroad, I perceived it, and had for some time a fair Prospect of it, the Horizon being pretty free and open where I then was.  but after a while, it grew by degrees weaker and weaker, so that in about a quarter of an Hour after I fist saw it, the top-part (a.b.d. in Fig 1) was scarce visible.  But the lower part remained vivid much longer, but yet grew by degrees shorter and shorter.  I saw the Remains of the lower half (b.d.e.f.) a full Hour after Sun-set; and should perhaps have seen it longer, had the Horizon been open, But it was often in my Walk pet up with trees, which not only obstructed my sight of the end of this unusual Appearance, but also hindered me from an exquisite Observation of all the Particulars that might probably occur.
    The whole Atmosphere seemed hazy, and full of Vapours, especially towards the Sun-set.  The moon and Stars were that Evening bearded at that time, and succeeded with an Halo about the Moon afterwards.  Which disposition of the Air was probably the cause of the Phenomenon.  But the Pyramid was undoubtedly imprinted upon the far distant Vapours of the Atmosphere; it being manily farther off, or lying beyond some small thin Clouds (c.t.c.l.) that intercepted it, and in those parts covered and hid it.
    Altho' I have the greatest part of my Life been ready enough to take notice of such Appearances, yet I do not remember I ever saw anything like it, except the white Pyramidal Glade, which is not encircled by the Name of the Aurora Borealis.  And it being (except in Colour and Length) so like that, I have thought it worth your cognizance, and, if you think fit, of our most illustrious and famous Society also; because it may perchance in some measure conduce to the Solution of that odd Phenomenon, the Aurora borealis.
    I was just going to give you some of my Observations about the Migration of Birds this Year, which makes me hope, that the Subject is within the reach of the Royal Society to discover.  But being prevented, I have not time just now, but shall reserve it for a more convenient Opportunity, when I have more leisure.
    I have searched every Night since for this Pyramis Vespertina, but have not seen any such Appearance, although the next Evening was hazy and likely.  I also looked out to see whether the Aurora Borealis would succeed in the room therof, but discovered no such thing."
 
 
 
This particular event leaves me scratching my head.  I once saw a very similar phenomenon looking northward in Southern Illinois on Route 127 driving from Carbondale towards Nashville.  It was later at night and at the time we called the two clouds a "fried egg" phenomenon.  Same colors as this author reports.  Usually when researching these articles, I can look up events for this date.  Other newspaper clippings for the area are a good place to go as well.  Tonight, I'm stumped.  I am getting some sort of error on my initial searches that is taking me to people's calendars where nothing is obviously scheduled.  Hopefully, I can continue to chew on this in my brain and come up with some follow up information.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Flying Spiders in 1867

I find myself pleasantly surprised that spiders get to make their way into this examination of unidentified flying objects.  I expected meteors, auroras, birds, rocks, and any number of other things, but not insects.  Working from this database of unidentified flying objects, I didn't really think it would just be anything flying through the air.  This is pretty fascinating though as a person who really likes to spend time outdoors.  Now that I think back, I remember hearing about flying spiders on one of the many podcasts I listen to in relation to the Brazil videos.


by J. H. Emerton
 
     One of the most curious habits of spiders is that of flying, as it is often called.  This has no resemblance to the flight of birds or butterflies, for spiders have no wings nor any organs which could answer the purpose of wings.  Their ability to rise in the atmosphere depends entirely upon currents of air acting upon their bodies or upon threads of cobweb attached to them.  By this means they are blown about like the down of thistles or any light objects, rising sometimes to a great height and again, upon a change of weather, falling, often far from the place whence they rose.
     In the autumn of 1870 I received a letter from an officer on one of the United States vessels, in which he stated hat one day while at anchor near Montevideo, after a strong wind, the rigging was filled with cobwebs, and little spiders dropped down on all parts of the deck.
     Mr. Darwin, when in the same region during the voyage of the Beagle, several times noticed that the same occurrence.  He says in his narrative of that voyage: *--
     "On several occasions, when the vessel has been within the mouth of the Plata, the rigging has been coated with the web of the gossamer spider.  One day (November 1st, 1832) I paid particular attention to the phenomenon.  The weather had been fine and clear, and in the morning the air was full of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in England.  The ship was sixty mils from the land, in the direction of a steady though light breeze.  Vast numbers of a small spider, about one-tenth of an inch in length, and of a dusky red color, were attached to the webs.  There must have been, I should suppose, some thousands on the ship.  The little spider, when first coming in contact with the rigging, was always seated on a single thread, and not on the flocculent mass.  The latter seemed merely to be produced by the entanglement of the single threads.  The spiders were all of one species, but of both sexes, together with young ones........ While watching some that were suspended by a single thread, I several times observed that the slightest breath of air bore them away out of sight, in a horizontal line.  On another occasion (Nov. 25th) under similar circumstances, I repeatedly observed the same kind of small spider, either when placed, or having crawled, on some little eminence, elevate its abdomen, send forth a thread, and then sail away in a lateral course, but with a rapidity that was quite unaccountable.  I thought I could perceive that the spider, before performing the above preparatory steps, connected its legs together with the most delicate threads, but I am not sure whether this observation is correct.
     "One day at Santa Fe I had a better opportunity of observing similar facts.  A spider, which was about three-tenths of an inch in length, and which, in its general appearance, resembled a Citi-grade (therefore quite different from the gossamer spider), while standing on the summit of a post, darted forth four or five threads from its spinners.  These, glittering in the sunshine, might be compared to rays of light.  They were not, however, straight, but in undulations like a film of silk blown by the wind.  They were more than a yard in length and diverged in an ascending direction from the orifices.  The spider then suddenly let go its hold and was quickly borne out of sight.  The day was hot and apparently quite calm; yet under such circumstances the atmosphere can never be so tranquil as not to affect a vane so delicate as the thread of a spider's web.  If during a warm day we look either at the shadow of any object cast on a bank, or over a level plain, at a distant landmark, the effect of an ascending current of heated air will almost always be evident, and this probably would be sufficient to carry with it so light an object and as the little spider on its thread."
 
[* Journal of the Voyage of the Beagle, p. 187}
 
     In Temple's Travels in Peru * it is mentioned that , when sailing up the river Plate, "the rigging of the ship, from top to bottom, was literally covered with long, fine cobwebs that had been blown off the shore, having attached to them their insect manufacturers, who dispersed themselves in thousands over the deck."
     Such showers of cobwebs are common in Europe, especially in the autumn.  They are said to be usually preceded by a great quantity of web upon the ground, which afterwards rises, and when the wind changes, or the sun begins to go down, falls again.
     Mr. Blackwall, ** who has devoted many years to the study of English spiders, gives the following interesting account of one of these showers of gossamer:--
 
[*Temple's Travels in Peru, Vol. I, p. 49}
[**Researches in Natural History 1832. Linnaean Transactions, Vol. XV.]
 
    "A little before noon on the 1st of October, 1826, which was a remarkably calm, sunny day, the thermometer in the shade ranging from 55 degrees to 64 degrees, I observed that the fields and hedges in the neighborhood of Manchester were covered over, by the united labors of a multitude of spiders, with a profusion of fine glossy lines, intersecting one another at every angle and forming a confused kind of network.  So extremely numerous were these slender filaments, that in walking across a small pasture, my feet and ankles were thickly coated with them.  It was evident, however, notwithstanding their great abundance, that they must have ben produced in a very short space of time, as early in the morning they were not sufficiently conspicuous to attract my notice, and on the 30th of September they could not have existed at all; for, on referring to my meteorological journal, I find that a strong gale from the south prevailed during the greater part of the day.  A circumstance so extraordinary could not fail to excite curiosity; but what more particularly arrested my attention was the ascent of an amazing quantity of webs of an irregular, complicated structure, resembling raveled silk of the finest quality and clearest white.  They were of various shapes and dimensions, some of the longest measuring upwards of five feet in length and several inches in breadth in the widest part; while others were almost as broad as long, presenting an area of a few square inches only.  These webs, it was quickly perceived, were not formed in the air, as is generally believed, but at the earth's surface.  The lines of which they were composed, being brought into contact by the mechanical action of gentle airs, adhered together till, by continual additions, they were accumulated into flakes or masses of considerable magnitude, on which the ascending current, occasioned by the rarefaction of the air contiguous to the heated ground, acted with so much force as to separate them from the objects to which they were attached, raising them into the atmosphere to a perpendicular height of at least several hundred feet.  I collected a number of those webs about midday, as they rose, and again in the afternoon, when the upward current had ceased to support them, and they were falling; but scarcely one in twenty contained a spider, though on minute inspection, I found small winged insects, chiefly aphides, entangled in most of them.
     "From contemplating this unusual display of gossamer, my thoughts were naturally directed to the animals which produced it; and the countless myriads in which they swarmed created almost as much surprise as the singular occupation that engrossed them.  Apparently actuated by the same impulse, all were intent upon traversing the region of air; accordingly, after gaining the summits of various objects, as blades of grass, stubble, rails, gates, etc., by the slow and laborious process of climbing, they raised themselves still higher by straightening their limbs, and elevating the abdomen by bringing it from the usual horizontal position into one almost perpendicular, they emitted from their spinning apparatus a small quantity of the glutinous secretion with which they fabricate their silken tissues.  This viscid substance being drawn out by the ascending current of rarefied air into fine lines several feet in length, was carried upwards, until the spiders, feeling themselves acted upon with sufficient force in that direction, quitted their hold of the objects on which they stood, and commenced their journey by mounting aloft.  Whenever the lines became inadequate to the purpose for which they were intended, by adhering to any fixed object, they were immediately detached from the spinners by means of the last pair of legs and became converted into terrestrial gossamer, and the proceeding just described was repeated."
 
    I do not know of any published account of similar flights of cobwebs in this country, but on almost any fine morning in summer the grass and shrubs may be found covered with threads connecting the extremities of the twigs and leaves in every direction, and floating horizontally from them sometimes to a distance of several yards.  I have often seen the short grass in the Salem pasture so covered that ever leaf seemed to have several threads passing from it.  One morning in June, 1868, I noticed some little spiders about one tenth of an inch long rambling about on the top of a low fence partly shaded by horse-chestnuts and apple-trees.  At intervals they would stop, raise the back part of their bodies,
and straighten their legs until they stood on tip-toe in the ridiculous position shown in the figure.  (Fig. 43.)  After a few seconds they would retake their customary position and travel on.  I went to the same fence and watched them on several successive mornings, and finally saw one, on the edge of the fence-cap, raise itself as in the figure and immediately after a thread extended upward from its spinners.  In a few seconds the thread increased to nearly a yard in length, when spider and all rose slowly upward until the thread became entangled in the branches of the apple-tree above, which were already connected together by numerous threads and occupied by several spiders of the same kind.  This took place soon after sunrise on a warm, and apparently perfectly calm morning.
     At another time, on one of the first warm days in March, I saw a little crab-spider running about on the ends of a barberry bush and dropping from twig to twig until it hung from the most projecting branch by a thread about a foot long.  It swung back and forth for some minutes when a gust of wind blew it away so quickly that I could not follow it with my eyes.  It had, however, spun a thread as it went which passed from the bush to a juniper about six feet off.
     Mr. R. P. Whitfield of Albany, N. Y., tells me that once when passing through a field of oat stubble on a warm day in the autumn, he observed great numbers of threads floating upwards in the air, the lower extremity being attached to the upper ends of the stubble, and on examining some of the stalks he found numbers of small spiders busily running up and down them.  When a suitable place was found the spider would attach a thread to the upper end of the stalk and then descend one or two inches and return, allowing the air to carry upward the loose thread.  At the same time it elevated its abdomen and the current, acting on the loop already formed, drew out the thread from the spinnerets until a sufficient quantity had passed, when it broke off the end attached to the stalk and floated away with the web. In this way he observed several individuals ascend.  At the time there was no perceptible current in the atmosphere except the upward current caused by rarefaction.
     In the autumn of 1865, in Northwestern Iowa, passing along the smooth surface of the river in a boat, he observed something crossing the river  with a skipping motion, striking the surface of the water at irregular intervals.  Looking about he saw that the same thing was taking place at other points.  Upon intercepting one, which he had watched almost from the opposite bank, he found it to be a small spider (Attus), from the abdomen of which threads of web extended several feet into the air, by which it was floated along.  As it crossed the water, the air being cooler, it had descended, allowing the spider to touch the surface of the river.
     To account for the ascent of threads and spiders various theories have been proposed.  It was formerly supposed that the threads were thrown out from the spider as water is from a syringe, independently of any outside force, and that the threads were afterwards blown into the air carrying the spider with them. 
     Some have thought that the spiders actually flew in the air without help from webs or from the wind, using their legs as wings. *
     Mr. Murray ** believed that a spider could shoot its threads in any direction without reference to the wind.  He says: --
     "Contrary to the assertion that 'spiders have no power of propelling their webs without assistance from the wind,' I fearlessly assert that they can do so in an atmosphere in which the very leaf of the aspen remains motionless; and although their char Volant obeys the direction of the breeze, this simple fact proves nothing in favor of the opinion of Mr. Blackwall.  The aeronautic spider can propel its threads both horizontally and vertically and at all relative angles, in motionless air, and in an atmosphere agitated by winds; nay, more, the aerial traveler can even dart its thread, to use a nautical phrase, in the 'wind's eye.'  My opinion and observations are based on many hundreds of experiments.  On favorable occasions I am constantly extending their amount, and as often do I find my deductions supported, namely, that the entire phenomena are electrical.  In clear, fine weather the air is invariably positive; and it is precisely in such weather that the aeronautic spider makes its ascent most easily and rapidly, whether it be summer or winter.  I have often seen this in winter, during an intense frost, a circumstance which renders the action of warm currents of air, as accessory to its flight, something more than questionable.  Our aeronaut may be met with in its descent over the Mer de Glace as well over the Lake of Geneva; and it will take flight as readily from a point over the frozen sea as from the heated surface soil of the valley of Chamouny.
     "Several circumstances concur to shew the phenomena of ascent to be electric.  The propelled threads do not interfere with each other; they are divellent, and this divergence seemed to proceed from their being imbued with similar electricity, and the character of that electricity appeared to me to be an interesting subject for subsequent research.......  When a metallic conductor is brought near to the suspended spider, it disarranges its projectiles, and the insect, conscious of some counteracting agency, coils up its threads.
     "When a stick of sealing-wax is brought near the thread of suspension, it is evidently repelled, consequently the electricity of the thread is of a negative character.  The descent of the thread is instantly determined by bringing over it the excited sealing-wax; and if strongly excited, and the spider let fall on its surface, it bounds from it with considerable energy.  On the 3d of July, 1822, at 4 P.M., thermometer 66 degrees Fahr., two aeronautic spiders, on separate threads, were brought near to each other; a mutual repulsion supervened; and when one was brought in momentary contact with the other, it immediately fell lower in the perpendicular plane.
     "An excited glass tube brought near, seemed to attract the thread, and with it the aeronautic spider.  When the insect was thus positively electrified, the rapidity which marked its descent, and extent of thread spun out, and which I frequently coiled up, was truly astonishing, being at least 30 feet in length."
[*J.J. Virey, Ferussac's Bulletin Sciences Naturelles, Tom. viii]
[**Memoirs Wernerian Soc., Vol. v, pt.2, 1826; and Loudon's Mag. Nat. Hist. Vol. I, 1829]
 
     The manner in which the thread starts from the body is difficult to determine, on account of the small size of the spiders.  One theory is that the spider must attach one end of its thread to a fixed object, so that the wind may have a loop to blow against.  Some think it more probable that a small quantity of gummy material is emitted from the spinnerets and drawn into a thread by the current; * others, that the spinnerets of opposite sides are brought in contact and then drawn apart, forming a little web between  them which offers enough surface to the wind to be blown away, carrying out the thread with it.
 
[*REnnie's Insect architecture, p. 381]
 
For More Information on Flying Spiders:
Ballooning (spider)

And for fun, I found this little gem....
 

 
 
 
 
 



Friday, July 19, 2013

An Early Sighting, The Considerable Comet of 1676



excerpt from Philosophical Transactions. May 26, 1677.

"Sir, 

I do not know, whether in your transactions you have any where taken notice of that unusual meteor which happened on Wednesday Sept. 20th. last past, about seven of the clock at night or soon after; which, though it seemed very low, was seen in most parts of England much at the same time, and much in the same manner.  I hear of it from divers persons who saw it in Oxford, Northamptonshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Somersetshire, Hampshire, Kent, Essex, London, etc.  and I doubt not but you have heard of divers more.  Some here call it a Draco volans.  I have sometimes been fancying, it might be higher than they imagined, only casting a light so low.  And if I had heard any thing from it abroad, should have inclined to think it a Comet, passing swiftly by us, very near the Earth, even through our Air.  But, if it had been so, it must be a very little one, or else we should have heard more of it.

A Third Letter from the same hand, concerning the same meteor.  Oxford, May 8. 1677

Sir,

I remember that in January last I wrote you two Letters, concerning an unusual appearance which had here happened not long before, on Wednesday Septem. 20th, 1676, between seven and eight of the clock at night.  In the dusk of the Evening (about Candle-lighting) there appeared a sudden light, equal to that of Noon-day; so that the smallest pin or straw might be seen lying on the ground.  And, above in the Air, was seen (at no great distance as was supposed) a long appearance as of fire; like a long arm (for so it was described to me) with a great knob at the end of it; shooting along very swiftly: and, at its disappearing, seemed to break into small sparks or parcels of fire, like as Rockets and such Artificial fire-works in the Air are wont to do.  'Twas so surprizing, and of so short continuance, that it was scarece seen by any who did not then happen to be abroad.  'Twas judged, by him from whom I first heard of it, (for I had not the hap to see it my self,) to continue about two or three minutes:  But, I find he took a minute to be a very short time, (little more than a moment.)  From others I am told, it was scarce longer than while one might tell fifteen or twenty at the most; which will be less than half a minute.  All this might happen well enough from some Fiery Meteor in our Air; as a Draco volans (as some have been pleased to call this) or the like.  But that which makes it to me the more suprizing, is this; that I find the fame to have been seen in most parts of England, and at or near the same time: As, not only in Oxford and Oxfordshire, but also in Northamptonshire, Gloucestershire, Worcestershire, Somersetshire, Devonshire, Hampshire, Suffex, Surrey, Kent, Essex and (particularly) by the Water-men on the Thames in the passage between Gravesend and London.  In how many other parts of England, or in what parts out of England it might be seen; I have not yet heard.  But this is a great breadth of ground, and too much for an ordinary Meteor in our lower region of the Air to be seen in at once: Yet (for ought I hear) it is agreed by all to have ben seen at the same time, between seven and eight at night the same day, in the dusk of the Evening.  Which argues, that either it was higher than they imagined, (though the light of it reached the Earth) or else, that it had a very swift motion.  This made me then conjecture, (what in those Letters I signified,) that it might be some small Comet, whose linea trajectoria passed very near our Earth, or upon it.  And I therefore enquired from you, what news might be heard of it from beyond the Seas, or in parts of England further off, and what more particular account thereof you might have from the variety of your Correspondents.  For I judged it not improbable, that it might, when further distant from us, appear in the form of a Comet.  That Comet, which hath now appeared, in this and the last month, comfirms me in the same opinion; which I conjecture may be the very same which passed by us in September last.  Why it was not sooner seen, I cannot tell; save, what is the common fate of most Comets, that they are seldom observed till after their nearest distance from us: And, perhaps, it may have been so near the Sun (as to its visible place) as not to be much aove our Horizon save in the day time.  And for the like reason it may be, that in September last, when it passed by us, it was not more seen abroad in other parts; it might pass them in the day time, being but in the Twy-light with us; and, had it been one our sooner, the day-light would have hindred us from seeing it.  Which way its motion was when near us, I cannot conclude, so as to satisfie my self.  For most that saw it, being suddenly surprized, took little more notice of it than that it suddenly appeared and was suddenly gone, but saw it so little time as scarce to mark which way.  By the account I had from one in Northamptonshire (between Brackly and Banbury,) it should seem to have moved there towards the South-west.  By the account I had from one who saw it in Hampshire (between Winchester and Southampton)it should seem to be towards the South east; from others I have nothing of certainty, and therefore can conclude nothing. (It's motion might then seem to us the swifter, if its proper motion were then one way; and the Earths motion here at the same time, contrary to it.  And it is not impossible, that its dashing against the Earth might disturb its motion; as when Clouds, in their passage, meet with Mountains.) By this time I suppose it may be gotten so far from us that its apparent motion is very little.  And so late it was before we heard of it here, and it is now so finall, and so near the Sun, and the weather withal hath been so cloudy, that I (and some others who would willingly have seen it) have not had the hap to see it at all.  My conjecture upon the whole, though perhaps but a conjecture, hath at least so much of probability in it, as to deserve some consideration: and may serve (if true) to give us some light into the nature of Comets; which perhaps will seldom have been found to come so near us, as this seems to have done.  I add no more, but that I am 

Yours, etc.

John Wallis."

I found this referenced in Barry Greenwood's UNION CATALOGUE OF UFO ARTICLES.   In the history of mysteries, we find paradigms of the times impacting perceptions and people willing to step outside of that paradigm and formulate their own ideas.  These open thinkers are creative and curious, sometimes wrong and sometimes right.  Sometimes they just spur the discussion on towards people who can formulate a new working paradigm.  This is what I find most fascinating about those interested in UFOlogy or paranormal research.

In this case, the working paradigm of the time still derived from Aristotle's Universal Model outlined in Meteorologica, published around 357 B.C.  By this century of the letters above, many of the ideas contained in Meteorologica were outdated, but meteor theory still held on.  Meteors were still considered an atmospheric phenomena.  John Wallis writes of his curiosity and ideas to the newly established Royal Society.  The large area in which this sighting is reported gives him pause the think that this cannot be an atmospheric event.  No reply was ever given, but 38 years later, Edmond Halley (in 1714) presents the first in-depth analysis of meteoric phenomena.  Even so, Edmond Halley seemed indecisive on his theories and it still took time for the previous paradigm of rising vapors in the atmosphere causing meteors to be discarded.

I find myself curious about the inclusion of this in a UFO database.  Granted it is impossible to accurately identify what witness actually viewed, I believe we have a fairly good notion in hind sight what was seen over England that night.  There is a listing for 1676 for a meteor called Copinsay in the Meteoritical Society database.   One of the most impressive sights I have ever seen is a small meteor streaking with brilliant green light across the night sky while driving on an urban interstate.  It was very much like fireworks with a magnificent trail.  My assumption of what it was just illustrates how we view the unexpected and label it in our minds.  What new scientific innovations will greet us as the years progress?  We cannot know, but I do know that I have considerable respect for those researchers amateur and professional that are willing to give ideas a try and keep us moving forward in discovering the unknown.

Notable Events of 1676:
 
Anton van Leeuwenhoek discovers microorganisms
First recorded major influenza outbreak
Christopher Wren active in architecture

References: