Every now and then well meaning readers - and mostly likley a few hoaxsters - send me pictures with accompanying text to include in my blog with that melodramatic Internet advice: "Tell everyone you know!" Some are obvious hoaxes or clever composite pictures. And some pictures are accurate but for reasons that baffle me the accompanying text is pure fiction like a picture sent to me of a "really big mountain lion in michigan near a friend's house". The mule deer and flora in the same picture shows it was clearly not photographed in Michigan. And then there are some tales with a grain of truth but doctored to add flare with personal motivation twists. This is one such tale: A "Fire Rainbow" that happened "just last week" and "one of the rarest of all atomospheric phenomena" And it proclaimed it as: "A message from God!" It took about sixty seconds of detective work to debunk, "last week" and "rare". The photo is real. Not last week. Idaho in 2006. A "fire rainbow" has nothing to do with fire and is not a rainbow and they are not the rarest of atmospheric phenomena. It's properly called a circumhorizontal arc (a ho-hum sounding name, yawn) and is formed when the sun's rays pass in just the right way through high altitude cirrus clouds. It is a fairly common halo in Michigan and several small patchy ones were visable in Oakland County on the afternoon of October 29th. As for a message from God? The person who forwarded it to me did not tell me the secret Lordly message. What puzzles me is why when our Earth is full of real things in nature's way that are magical but real we must create false facts (translate that as lies) or alter images and tales to "improve" on the wonders of nature and the adaptations and wonders of evolution of life on Earth. Passing on or creating doctored facts do not make our wits grow sharper.
Jonathan - Sometimes you just really smack a home run with your comments. This is one of those days.
ReplyDeleteI am still trying to learn all the features of Photoshop. It is amazing what can be done with a photo now and it takes an expert to find the fakes.
ReplyDeleteWell said, Mr. Schechter.
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