Blue Light Spotted in Marrakesh Sky before Earthquake

A man stands next to a damaged hotel after the earthquake inMoulay Brahim village, near the epicentre of the earthquake, outsideMarrakech, Morocco, September 9, 2023. (Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP)
A man stands next to a damaged hotel after the earthquake inMoulay Brahim village, near the epicentre of the earthquake, outsideMarrakech, Morocco, September 9, 2023. (Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP)
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Blue Light Spotted in Marrakesh Sky before Earthquake

A man stands next to a damaged hotel after the earthquake inMoulay Brahim village, near the epicentre of the earthquake, outsideMarrakech, Morocco, September 9, 2023. (Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP)
A man stands next to a damaged hotel after the earthquake inMoulay Brahim village, near the epicentre of the earthquake, outsideMarrakech, Morocco, September 9, 2023. (Mosa'ab Elshamy/AP)

When a strong earthquake hit Morocco, footage showing blue lights in the sky right before the disaster, went viral on social media.

Few months ago, similar videos spread before the Kahramanmaras 7.8-magnitude earthquake, which affected Türkiye and parts of Syria.

What are these lights?

 

Like ball lightning, earthquake lights are relatively rare—captivating but hard for scientists to explain. These instances of luminosity around earthquakes don't all look the same, sparking theories that range from plain old lightning to UFOs.

The lights can take "many different shapes, forms, and colors," Friedemann Freund, an adjunct professor of physics at San Jose State University and a senior researcher at NASA's Ames Research Center, said in a 2014 National Geographic interview.

 

Earthquake lights in history

 

Freund and colleagues studied 65 accounts of such lights reaching as far back as 1600, publishing their findings in the journal Seismological Research Letters in 2014.

On November 12, 1988, for example, people reported a bright purple-pink globe of light along the St. Lawrence River in Quebec, 11 days before a powerful quake. In Pisco, Peru, the lights were bright flashes that lit up the sky, captured in security camera video before an 8.0-magnitude quake in 2007. Before a 2009 earthquake in L'Aquila, Italy, 10-centimetre flames of light were seen flickering above a stone street.

 

Are they real?

The US Geological Survey is circumspect about whether earthquake lights, or EQL, really exist. "Geophysicists differ on the extent to which they think that individual reports of unusual lighting near the time and epicenter of an earthquake actually represent EQL," the agency says on its website.

 

What could cause earthquake lights?

Analyzing 65 earthquake light incidents for patterns, Freund and colleagues theorized that the lights are caused by electric charges activated in certain types of rocks during seismic activity, "as if you switched on a battery in the Earth's crust".

Basalt and gabbro rocks, for example, have tiny defects in their crystals that could release electrical charges into the air.

The conditions that lend themselves to the lights exist in less than 0.5 percent of earthquakes worldwide, the scientists estimated, which would explain why they have been relatively rare.

They also noted that the earthquake lights more commonly appear before or during quakes, not as much afterward.

An earlier study proposed that tectonic stress created a so-called "piezoelectric effect", in which quartz-bearing rocks produce strong electric fields when compressed in a certain way.

But one of the complications in studying earthquake lights is, of course, that they're unpredictable and short-lived. In an attempt to work around this, some scientists have attempted to recreate the phenomenon in the lab.

In a study led by a physicist at New Jersey's Rutgers University and published in 2014, grains of different materials—flour and plastic—produced voltage spikes when agitated. The scientists attributed this effect to friction between the grains, which would contradict both the piezoelectric theory and Freund's.

As long as conflicting scientific theories emerge, the debate over causes of earthquake lights stands to remain charged.



3 Climbers Fell 400 Feet to their Death. One climber Survived and Drove to Pay Phone

The Okanogan County Search and Rescue team responds to a climbing accident in the North Cascades mountains in Washington on Sunday, May 11, 2025. (Okanogan County Sheriff's Office via AP)
The Okanogan County Search and Rescue team responds to a climbing accident in the North Cascades mountains in Washington on Sunday, May 11, 2025. (Okanogan County Sheriff's Office via AP)
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3 Climbers Fell 400 Feet to their Death. One climber Survived and Drove to Pay Phone

The Okanogan County Search and Rescue team responds to a climbing accident in the North Cascades mountains in Washington on Sunday, May 11, 2025. (Okanogan County Sheriff's Office via AP)
The Okanogan County Search and Rescue team responds to a climbing accident in the North Cascades mountains in Washington on Sunday, May 11, 2025. (Okanogan County Sheriff's Office via AP)

A rock climber who fell hundreds of feet descending a steep gully in Washington's North Cascades mountains survived the fall that killed his three companions, hiked to his car in the dark and then drove to a pay phone to call for help, authorities said Tuesday.

The surviving climber, Anton Tselykh, 38, extricated himself from a tangle of ropes, helmets and other equipment after the fall Saturday evening. Despite suffering internal bleeding and head trauma, Tselykh eventually, over at least a dozen hours, made the trek to the pay phone, Okanogan County Undersheriff Dave Yarnell said, according to The Associated Press.

The climbers who were killed were Vishnu Irigireddy, 48, Tim Nguyen, 63, Oleksander Martynenko, 36, Okanogan County Coroner Dave Rodriguez said.

Authorities haven't yet been able to interview the survivor, who is in a Seattle hospital, said Rodriguez, so much is still unknown of the fall and Tselykh's journey.

Falls like this leading to three deaths are extremely rare, said Cristina Woodworth, who leads the sheriff’s search and rescue team. Seven years ago, two climbers were killed in a fall on El Capitan at Yosemite National Park in California.

The group of four were scaling the Early Winters Spires, jagged peaks split by a cleft that is popular with climbers in the North Cascade Range, about 160 miles (257 kilometers) northeast of Seattle. Tselykh was hospitalized in Seattle.

The group of four met with disaster that night when the anchor used to secure their ropes was torn from the rock while they were descending, Rodriguez said. The anchor they were using, a metal spike called a piton, appeared to have been placed there by past climbers, he said.

They plummeted for about 200 feet (60 meters) into a slanted gulch and then tumbled another 200 feet before coming to rest, Yarnell said. Authorities believe the group had been ascending but turned around when they saw a storm approaching.

A three-person search and rescue team reached the site of the fall Sunday, Woodworth said. The team used coordinates from a device the climbers had been carrying, which had been shared by a friend of the men.

Once they found the site, they called in a helicopter to remove the bodies one at a time because of the rough terrain, Woodworth said.

On Monday, responders poured over the recovered equipment trying to decipher what caused the fall, Woodworth said. They found a piton — basically a small metal spike that is driven into rock cracks or ice and used as anchors by climbers — that was still clipped into the climbers' ropes.

“There’s no other reason it would be hooked onto the rope unless it pulled out of the rock,” said Rodriguez, the coroner, noting that pitons are typically stuck fast in the rock. Rodriguez added that when rappelling, all four men would not have be hanging from the one piton at the same time, but taking turns moving down the mountain.

Pitons are oftentimes left in walls. They can be there for years or even decades, and they may become less secure over time.

“It looked old and weathered, and the rest of their equipment looked newer, so we are making the assumption that it was an old piton,” Woodworth said.

Rock climbers secure themselves by ropes to anchors, such as pitons or other climbing equipment. The ropes are intended to arrest their fall if they should slip, and typically climbers use backup anchors, said Joshua Cole, a guide and co-owner of North Cascades Mountain Guides, who has been climbing in the area for about 20 years.

Generally, it would be unusual to rappel off a single piton, said Cole, adding that it is still unknown exactly what happened on the wall that night.

“We eventually, if possible, would like to get more information from surviving party,” Woodworth said.

The spires are a popular climbing spot. The route the climbers were taking, said Cole, was of moderate difficulty, and requires moving between ice, snow and rock.
But the conditions, the amount of ice versus rock for example, can change rapidly with the weather, he said, even week to week or day to day, changing the route's risks.