I didn't but I heard a funky music.
2006-08-17 15:41:58
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answer #1
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answered by Muffin 4
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i believe it replaced into the Olber's Paradox, many years in the past, that wondered an similar ingredient. If stars are frivolously spaced and there are a limiteless type of them, then the celebrities that are fainter because they're farther away could be merely as outstanding as interior sight ones because there are more effective of them. Olber did not study stars being scattered in galaxies, that are literally not precisely frivolously spaced, nor did he study airborne dirt and dust clouds or gas clouds in area that keep us from seeing many stars. the answer for your question is, the Earth colors us from the solar, and the celebrities are too few and distant to make up the shortcoming of image voltaic lights. pollutants has no longer something to do with it, because the evening sky has continuously been darkish, and actual it truly is a lot less so now because of pollutants. for sure, in intense latitudes and in some seasons, the evening sky may be very outstanding, yet that would not really enter into the question.
2016-11-24 22:52:17
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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That is a wonderful cluster of stars that goes through every year at this time. It's well worth staying up to watch, because it is really spectacular if you get a clear night. They are called the Pleiades, and if you punch pleiades into Yahoo search, you'll see a photograph of the cluster, so you can confirm what you saw.
2006-08-17 17:00:24
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answer #3
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answered by old lady 7
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That was the Tour Group from Beta Ritucuilus Gamma Alpha Four. They were doing the old skimmer trick trying to cause a panic among the primitives on the ground.
Opps!!! I guess you were one of those primitives!!!
2006-08-18 05:17:58
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Can you say Auroa Borielious I obvious can't spell it Not even close enough to get a suggestion. Northern lights,.
2006-08-13 02:09:35
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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It Was The Perseids Meteor Shower.
Lat night was the peak viewing for this awesome yearly event.
2006-08-13 02:07:35
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answer #6
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answered by hott.dawg™ 6
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I would contact your local radio station or tv station , and see if anyone else in your area reported strange lights in the sky
2006-08-13 02:07:12
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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I think you saw the Aurora Borealis, the northern lights. I don't think it was a meteor shower because of your description. (oh, and there is no such thing as god.)
2006-08-21 01:31:40
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answer #8
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answered by kemchan2 4
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Hello. - No. Sounds very interesting though.
Perhaps this evening, (just a suggestion) you should see if you can catch the lights on vid.-phone or digi-cam vid..
Good Luck.
Have a nice day. :)
2006-08-13 02:14:52
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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Still some meteor showers going on...might have been just a distorted atmospherice relay of such!
2006-08-13 02:07:54
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answer #10
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answered by azeera_2000 3
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Aroura Borealis,aka Northern lights possibly, other than that you were high
2006-08-20 09:07:48
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answer #11
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answered by cateylady2010 2
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