The Paulding Light
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Paulding Light (also called the "Lights of Paulding" or the "Dog Meadow Light") is a mysterious light that appears outside of Watersmeet, MI. The light appears to hover and move along a power line right of way. The colors shift continuously - red and white are the most common although green and blue have been reported. It appears every night. As of late paranormal researchers are becoming more and more skeptical of the mysterious light, some claiming that it has not been sighted in over three years, advocating that recent sightings of the light are nothing more than reflected headlights off of a recently expanded highway.
While the story surrounding the phenomenon asserts that the lights have been visible since the turn of the century, the first documented sighting was by a group of teenagers in 1966.
[edit] Possible Explanations
There are many popular explanations for the cause of the phenomenon. Theories range from radioactive gas, anomalies in the earth's magnetic field, glowing plasma, or swamp gas. Skeptics assert that the light is nothing more than headlights in the distance. Others believe that the paranormal has a hand in the lights origin. One popular paranormal tale describes the ghost of a brakeman killed in the nineteenth century as the cause. Alternative paranormal theories include UFO's and other ghosts.
Several amateur studies have been conducted, all of them concluding that the lights are indeed the result of the mid-1960's rerouting of highway 45, giving the viewing spot a slightly angled view of sporadic traffic along the new highway. The colors then match headlights, tail lights, and the warning lights of the occaisonal emergency vehicle. Proponents of supernatural explanations discount these studies, claiming that the lights studied in these cases are not, in fact, the actual Lights of Paulding.
[edit] More Information
Amateur study debunking supernatural phenomenon
Ontonagon County page about the light
The Mystery of the Paulding Lights in Wisconsin Academy Review (Spring 1994)