A photographer spent over an hour capturing thousands of images of what he described as “anomalous lights.” They moved and multiplied on the horizon. The similarity of some of these images to the “Kaikoura Lights” in New Zealand in the 1970s is undeniable.

by Ok_Incident_9027

2 Comments

  1. Ok_Incident_9027 on

    According to the photographer, for more than an hour bright spheres appeared in the sky, interacted with each other and multiplied. At a certain moment, it was possible to capture up to seven spheres hovering in the sky in an intriguing manner.

    Marcel Sachetti reported that he took thousands of shots during the event, using his camera with a 70–300 mm lens.

  2. These images are way too zoomed in, they are absolutely useless. They are just smeared points of light taken with a digital camera, and of those shapes could be caused by moving the camera or just regular shaking while zooming in too much.

    They look like the 1970s pictures because that’s what happens when you zoom in too much on points of light with a digital camera.

    A description of “anomalous lights that crossed each other near the horizon” could easily be Starlink flares, but with the images provided, it’s impossible to know.