White Northern Lights in Finland
Tag: aurora
In Norse mythology, the Northern Lights were attributable to light flashing from the armour and shields of the Valkyries. These were Odin’s battle maidens riding upon winged horses whose task was to choose the most heroic of those who had died in battle and carry them off to Valhalla…
FOX_6185s (by savillent)
FOX_5741s (by savillent)
Aurora in Ersfjordbotn (by John A.Hemmingsen)
Winternight in Ersfjordbotn (by John A.Hemmingsen)
Green Zone (by King of Foxes)
Northern Lights over an Erupting Volcano
In April 2010, the Icelandic volcano Eyjafjallajökull spewed great ash clouds into the sky and caused enormous disruptions to air travel in Europe. The eruptions are best remembered for this inconvenience, but photographer James Appleton managed to capture the event in a different way. In the weeks before the disturbances, a vulcanologist friend of his alerted him to the unfolding volcanic drama, and Appleton travelled straight to the Icelandic mountain before it was closed off. Risking his life to battle extreme cold, high winds, and seismic activity, Appleton captured a rare but gorgeous scene: the glowing lava from an Eyjafjallajökull fissure with the Northern Lights—Aurora Borealis—overhead. These are two very different light sources, so “the photograph needed parts of the scene selectively blocked for sections of the exposure to balance the contrast,” Appleton recalls. “A Mars bar wrapper came in handy for this!”