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- Jeremy Moore
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I saw a similar comment from someone in the far north of presumably US on a different site. The sun hardly sets in the highest latitudes these days.
That's true; it may never have got dark enough. I spent some time in the arctic many moons ago and we met a researcher who told us that conditions were then perfect for the aurora but it was never dark enough to see it.
But I was also thinking that the aurora zone forms a kind of doughnut ring about the earth and I wonder if it was too far south for an aurora in the far north, or whether it formed a cap at both ends of the planet.
Guess who slept through it all!!
Noooooooo!
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