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Friday, January 13, 2017

PHOTOS Photographer captures amazing 'light pillars' phenomenon in North Bay, Ontario

North Bay's Timothy Joseph Elzinga snapped the photos on his cellphone camera on Jan. 6.
North Bay's Timothy Joseph Elzinga snapped the photos on his cellphone camera on Jan. 6. (Timothy Joseph Elzinga)
PHOTOS

Photographer captures amazing 'light pillars' phenomenon in North Bay, Ont.

'It looked like someone from Star Trek was trying to beam people up,' says Timothy Joseph Elzinga


cbc masthead logo | 11 January 2017

A northern Ontario man was surprised to wake up in the middle of the night to see beams of brightly coloured lights shooting up into the sky.
"We can blame the two-year-old. He started crying at 1:30 a.m., so I got up and soothed him ... and out the window I had the perfect view of these dancing lights in the sky," said Timothy Joseph Elzinga.
"I had to investigate. I got some pants on and ran outside and took some photos."
According to National Geographic, Elzinga captured a weather phenomenon called light pillars.
light pillars
Timothy Joseph Elzinga told CBC News that people came out onto the street in the freezing weather to watch the lights as they changed between yellow, red, green, and blue. (Timothy Joseph Elzinga)
Light pillars appear when either natural or artificial light bounces off ice crystals floating close to the ground. 
In this case, the air was so cold that ice crystals were forming in the air, reflecting the city's street and business lights.
"It looked like someone from Star Trek was trying to beam people up," Elzinga said.
"It was very bright in person, like nothing I've ever seen. It almost seemed supernatural."

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