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Handbook of Unusual Natural Phenomena

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

$15.99
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Book Overview

Collects more than five hundred eyewitness accounts of nature's greatest mysteries, which have been documented in the most reputable and distinguished scientific journals, from cloudless rain and... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

One of the best books ever written.

Simply put, read this book, learn about nature. It's more than we can ever understand.

Great book

If you think the natural world is boring, buy this book! It can serve as either a reference or a source of countless hours of enjoyable reading. The phenomena described are eerie, fantastic, or simply weird, and all of them are interesting. The book illustrates beyond doubt how far we have to go before we completely understand what happens on this planet.. An example, ball lightning has been observed for many centuries, even photos exist, but only recently has a complete scientific explanation been forwarded. Mainstream science has indeed overlooked many of these phenomena, whether because of their rarity and the consequent lack of data, their sheer multitude, or fear that they might be associated with fringe paranormal groups (this book clearly isn't). But, that doesn't prevent you from reading and speculating about them.

This Is My Favorite Book On Nature's Mysteries.

When I first noticed this Handbook Of Unusual Natural Phenomena, it was laying on a book shop's discount table. And I didn't realize that it was about to become one of my most precious possessions. I refer to this book whenever I see any of nature's best sky shows. The cover of my 1977 edition, on a hardback I have carefully covered with plastic, shows a hand upraised in the dark. There are two types of lightening in the sky, and the Aurora Borealis, then a miniature rainbow emanates from each of the fingers spread out. Inside the book are hundreds of other drawings, accompanied by clearly written text, to define and discuss many kinds of unusual occurrences. At first you should just casually go through this book, getting a sense of all the things cataloged, because it will prepare you for noticing far more than what most people realize is happening over their heads. This is not a book about unidentified flying objects, unless comets with halos will do, but it can be just as exciting to identify natural mysteries. When you see rainbows, for example, you will be able to discern what's common or rare. Some rainbows are doubled, some join clouds together, some connect with objects, some only seem to connect to objects. Different categories for sunsets are also defined. I once kept a written log of the sunsets I saw, describing each day's display for a month. Although most of them were simply pleasant to watch, and not really that weird, on one occasion the round shape of the sun became a near perfect square! As I saw this from an area in San Francisco called the Sunset District, a local newspaper editor appreciated and published the sighting. In that article I credited this book, and later received a nice letter from Mr. Corliss. The square shaped sunset, which appeared on a Valentine's Day, generated so much interest that I wished I had brought along a camera. Then there was another notable natural event, one which occurred while I was visiting a friends house. I stood on his back porch after the sun had set, and noticed two peculiar lines which seemed to be dividing the sky into three parts. These stretched like telegraph lines all across the sky, just as if the Egyptian sky goddess, Nut, was responsible. I wiped my glasses and looked away, but each time the lines appeared. Finally I asked my host to come out, without any descriptive hints, to tell me what he saw up there (Just in case I was the nut). The sighting was soon confirmed, as he also saw the lines, and he ran in to alert his wife. When I got home I opened up this book and read the paragraphs which applied to this particular phenomena, where lines divide the sky. I was even more surprised that Corliss listed it as a highly rare occurrence. This may be because the lines are rather thin, and easy to miss. I kind of tingled all over, because I knew I was fortunate enough to experience something that few people even knew existed. Each person who gets thi

Totally Awesome

Read this book. Forget UFO's, MIB's and other stuff like that. The Real mysteries are the ones that Nature produces and our own scientists have no explanation for. This book documents almost all types of natural phenomena for the past couple of hundred years! I highly recomend this book to anyone that has ever wonderd about something that they have seen, like a horizontal rainbow or a blue ring around the moon. This is a totally awesome book.

Excellent! Highly recommended.

This is the book the X-files was afraid to tell you about! Corliss has gathered vivid accounts of the unexplained mysteries of nature--and without loosing a sense of awe and wonder. Yet he does not look for explainations in the weird or supernatural, but attempts to show that there must be some natural but unknown process at work. Indeed, he shows "modern" science guilty of too complacient, too narrow a view--and we are all knowledge impoverished as a result. Since "chance favors the prepared mind," I have been privledged to see some of the phenomena described in this book, and I am very grateful for the broadening of my observation of rare spectacles of nature.
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