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Ghostly swamp will-O'-the-wisps may be explained by science

forgotoldacc

It's interesting to me how common will o the wisp was in the past, but the concept seems completely forgotten. Of my grandmother's generation and in her town (which was nowhere near a swamp), everyone reported seeing weird lights floating around during their youth to early adulthood. They were always very clear that the lights were not fireflies, which were also common at the time but very distinct. I'm lucky I at least got to witness fireflies in my youth.

Anyways, an interesting nugget is buried in that article. It says that a reason will o the wisp may have been common in the past is because lantern flames may have ignited the gas, which seems like a decent explanation. People use electric light everywhere now.

I guess another issue could be that there's so much ambient lighting from street lights and light being reflected off clouds that it's simply too bright for us to see anything. People back in the day probably experienced a lot more completely black nights.

It's completely possible that will o the wisp will be a completely forgotten phenomenon in a couple more decades, since I don't know anyone under 80 who's reported seeing it, and kids probably don't even know of it now. And it makes me wonder if there are other phenomenons that ancient people were very aware of but no living person has ever seen.

greenbit

Multiple factors to think about..

* People spending less time outside at night in general these days, bc indoors is where all the gadgets are

* When you do go outside at night, are your eyes going to be as dark-adapted as someone from say 1850 might have been? Shorter walks between brighter places these days could factor in.

* Swamps aren't as common as they used to be; particularly in the early 20th century in the US, swamps were frequently drained to 'improve' the land. Not as much decaying vegetation near at hand.

* Virtually everyone that dies these days is either chemically preserved, or cremated, so not as much decaying flesh in the cemeteries

JKCalhoun

I first heard of these reading Joel Chandler Harris' Uncle Remus stories. He called them "Wull-er-de-Wust" [1].

[1] https://www.gutenberg.org/files/24430/24430-h/24430-h.htm#V

technothrasher

My first introduction was from the first edition D&D Monster Manual.

owlninja

I first heard of them as a card in Magic The Gathering!

bn-l

Haha me too. Still remember the card graphic also.

topkai22

Can we reflect on that this article starts with an Italian researcher named Luigi wearing a vacuum to try to suck in ghosts/will-o-the-wisps.

LiquidSky

Oh good, here I was thinking they could only be explained by magic.

metalman

science has advanced so far now that it has invented magic

RajT88

I'm sure the scientists have at least one green deck

codevark

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