The
Marfa lights or the
Marfa ghost
lights are unexplained lights (known as "
ghost lights") usually seen near
U.S. Route 67 on
Mitchell Flat east of Marfa
, Texas
, in the
United
States
.
The first published account of the lights was written in 1957, and
this article is the sole source for anecdotal claims that the
lights date back to the 1800s. Reports often describe brightly
glowing basketball sized spheres floating above the ground, or
sometimes high in the air. Colors are usually described as white,
yellow, orange or red, but green and blue are sometimes reported.
The balls are said to hover at about shoulder height, or to move
laterally at low speeds, or sometimes to shoot around rapidly in
any direction. They often appear in pairs or groups, according to
reports, to divide into pairs or merge together, to disappear and
reappear, and sometimes to move in seemingly regular patterns.
Their sizes are typically said to resemble soccer balls or
basketballs.
Sightings are reported occasionally and unpredictably, perhaps ten
to twenty times a year. There are no reliable reports of daytime
sightings; the lights seem to be a nocturnal phenomenon only.
According to the people who claim to have seen the lights, they may
appear at any time of night, typically south of
U.S. Route 90 and
U.S. Route
67, five to fifteen miles east of Marfa, at unpredictable
directions and apparent distances. They can persist from a fraction
of a second to several hours. There is evidently no connection
between appearances of the Marfa lights and anything else besides
nighttime hours. They appear in all seasons of the year and in any
weather, seemingly uninfluenced by such factors. They sometimes
have been observed during late dusk and early dawn, when the
landscape is dimly illuminated.
It is extremely difficult to approach an ongoing display of the
Marfa lights, mainly due to the dangerous terrain of Mitchell Flat.
Also, all of the land where the Marfa Lights are observed is
private property, and access is prohibited without explicit
permission from the owners. There are only a very few accounts of
success in moving very close to observed lights, but those that
exist generally describe objects resembling
fireworks lacking both smoke and sound.
Unsolved Mysteries testimonies
The lights were the subject of a segment on the TV series
Unsolved Mysteries. Elderly local
resident Julia Plumbley discusses the sighting her father Robert
Ellison reported in the early 20th century. Ellison and a fellow
rancher witnessed the lights and initally assumed them to be Apache
campfires, but the fires continued to be seen for weeks on end, and
beyond. Another local resident, Hallie Stillwell (b. circa 1898)
told of coming to Marfa in 1916 on business with some family
members and was riding near town in a car when a family member
pointed out the lights. The group observed them. Stillwell recalled
"We were just visiting and talking, and all of the sudden we saw
lights over on the Chinati Mountains. It couldn't be any kind of
car lights. And we first thought probably it was a campfire of
Indians or Mexicans, or ranchers. But it didn't act like a campfire
at all." The reenactment segment shows a young Stillwell commenting
on the lights moving around and floating above the ground. "They
were peculiar and I'd never seen anything like them before. And of
course none of us knew anything about it, we were not scientists or
anything like that, so we said 'Well, it couldn't be anything but a
ghost, its just ghost lights.' And from then on we mentioned them
as ghost lights." The segment further tells of the lights being
seen again in 1943 near Marfa's army air base. Witness Fritz Kahl
stated in interview, "When we saw the Marfa lights the first time
there was no vehicular traffic at night. Fuel was rationed, lights
were a phenomena in themselves in those days because there were no
lights. When the moon is out, its beautiful. When the moon is not
out its so dark its.. awesome. We saw something that was totally
foreign to anything in and around the airbase. When we did see the
lights we were very curious and we inquired in the village of Marfa
about these strange things, and yeah, sure, 'we've got little
lights, what else?'"
Reports of similar nocturnal lights

Official viewing platform, east of
Marfa
Less
frequent accounts of seemingly similar anomalous nocturnal lights
have arisen along a broad and elongated region within west Texas,
stretching generally from El Paso
southeastward along the Rio Grande
Valley, past Big Bend National Park
and farther southeastward into Mexico
.
Appearances of apparently similar lights have been reported
worldwide (see
Ghost
lights).
Criticism
Skeptics discount paranormal sources for the lights, attributing
them to mistaken sightings of ordinary nighttime lights, such as
distant vehicle lights, ranch lights, or astronomical objects. A
few suggest they have deliberately been given a paranomal mystique
designed to attract tourist business to this remote west Texas
area, pointing out that it wasn't until
July
1957 that the earliest published account of the Marfa lights,
"The Mystery of the Texas Ghost Light," by
Paul Moran, appeared in
Coronet magazine. Critics, challenging
this account, note that the designated "viewing area" is located at
the site of
Marfa Army Airfield, where tens of thousands of
personnel were stationed between 1942 and 1947, training American
and Allied pilots. This massive field was then used for years as a
regional airport, with daily airline service. Between Marfa AAF and
its satellite fields — each constantly patrolled by sentries — they
consider it unlikely that any actual phenomena would have remained
unobserved and unmentioned.
A number of projects carried out by nonresident investigators over
several decades have generally confirmed the appearance of the
anomalous lights often with photographic and video evidence. Many
suggestions have been offered to explain the reported observations,
but no consensus has been reached.
The dominant skeptical explanation seems to be that the lights are
a sort of mirage caused by sharp temperature gradients between cold
and warm layers of air. Marfa is located at an altitude of 4,688
feet (1,429 m) above sea level, and temperature differentials of
50-60 degrees Fahrenheit (28-33 degrees Celsius) between high and
low temperature are quite common. Proponents of this explanation
reject the close-range accounts of the phenomenon, which they
regard as invariably
anecdotal.
Some contend that the lights are the result of a naturally
occurring phenomenon, the
piezoelectric
effect, discovered by
Pierre Curie
in 1883. In this case, critics contend that the mountainous region
is made up of mostly rocks containing
quartz
that expand during the day and contract at night, due to
thermal expansion. This expansion and
contraction creates stress on the quartz crystals which in turn is
converted into voltage that is accumulated over time until it is
then discharged into the atmosphere creating a
ball lightning effect.
Other critics attribute Marfa Lights to automobile lights on
Highway 67. The four-night effort by UT Dallas students (see SPS
study below) focused on automobile lights and reached a conclusion
that vehicle lights can be seen from the View Park. The Aerial
Hyperspectral and Reflection Study (see below) also focused for one
night on reflected vehicle lights on Highway 67. These studies make
the case that car lights can be seen from the View Park and they do
look mysterious to many View Park visitors. Longer term studies
with multiple monitoring stations saving nightly videos have shown
that the core source of Marfa Lights reports may be some type of
natural light phenomena that appears as infrequently as 10 to 15
times a year. On the other hand, it is easily shown that automobile
headlights are very visible over great distances, and many Marfa
Lights observations can be dismissed as auto headlights.
The complete lack of reports from the tens of thousands of
potential observers at Marfa AAF and satellite fields is in keeping
with theories that attribute the lights toward man-made light
sources. During World War II, there were significantly fewer
potential fixed sources (such as ranch lights) and very few
vehicles driving at night.
The 2004 SPS investigation
In May
2004, a group from The Society of Physics Students at
the University of
Texas at Dallas
spent four days investigating and recording lights
observed southwest of the view park using traffic volume monitoring
equipment, video cameras, binoculars, and chase cars. Their
report
[70407] made the following conclusions:
- U.S. Highway 67 is visible from the Marfa Lights viewing
location
- The frequency of lights southwest of the view park correlates
with the frequency of vehicle traffic on U.S. 67
- The motion of the observed lights behaved in a predictable
fashion
- At least one light was directly correlated with a vehicle on
U.S. 67 observed by a chase vehicle.
They came to the conclusion that all of the lights observed over a
four night period southwest of the view park could be reliably
attributed to automobile headlights traveling along U.S. 67 between
Marfa and Presidio, TX.
Other people claim that researchers with longer running studies
have photographed mysterious lights south and southeast of the view
park.
Location
Marfa is located at .
The "Marfa Lights" label within this image shows where car lights
(not Marfa Lights) can be seen on Highway 67. Anecdotal stories
report that Marfa Lights are typically seen west, south and
southeast of the View Park instead of southwest as shown in this
image.
See also
References
- Judith M. Brueske, Ph.D., "The Marfa Lights, Being a Collection
of First-Hand Accounts by People Who Have Seen the Lights Close-Up
or in Unusual Circumstances, and Related Material," Second Revised
Edition, Ocotillo Enterprises, P.O. Box 195, Alpine, Texas 79831,
USA, 1989;
- James Bunnell, "Night Orbs," Lacey Publishing Company, 29
Bounty Road West, Benbrook, TX 76132-1003, USA, 2003;
- Herbert Lindee, "Ghosts Lights of Texas," Skeptical Inquirer, Vol. 166, No. 4,
Summer 1992, pp. 400–406;
- Elton Miles, "Tales of the Big Bend," Texas A&M University
Press, 1976, pp. 149–167;
- Paul Moran, "The Mystery of the Texas Ghost Light," Coronet Magazine, July 1957;
- Dennis Stacy, "The Marfa Lights, A Viewer's Guide," Seale &
Stacy, Box 12434, San Antonio, Texas 78212, USA, 1989;
- David Stipp, "Marfa, Texas, Finds a Flickering Fame in Mystery
Lights," Wall Street Journal,
March 21, 1984, p. A1.
- The Society of Physics Students at the University of Texas at
Dallas, "An Experimental Analysis of the Marfa Lights", 2004
External links