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  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 23/07/2013 . Manchester , UK . A blood red moon low over the skyline of Manchester , as seen tonight (23rd July 2013 ) with Manchester's iconic Beetham Tower in the foreground . The phenomenon can be caused by dust and pollution in the atmosphere and is most notable when the moon is low on the horizon as its light passes through a larger amount of atmosphere , which scatters blue light more than red . Biblical mythology makes several references to a red moon including , from Joel 2:31 , " The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes" . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_Blood_Moon_JGO_10.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 23/07/2013 . Manchester , UK . A blood red moon low over the skyline of Manchester , as seen tonight (23rd July 2013 ) with Manchester's iconic Beetham Tower in the foreground . The phenomenon can be caused by dust and pollution in the atmosphere and is most notable when the moon is low on the horizon as its light passes through a larger amount of atmosphere , which scatters blue light more than red . Biblical mythology makes several references to a red moon including , from Joel 2:31 , " The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes" . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_Blood_Moon_JGO_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 23/07/2013 . Manchester , UK . A blood red moon low over the skyline of Manchester , as seen tonight (23rd July 2013 ) with Manchester's iconic Beetham Tower in the foreground . The phenomenon can be caused by dust and pollution in the atmosphere and is most notable when the moon is low on the horizon as its light passes through a larger amount of atmosphere , which scatters blue light more than red . Biblical mythology makes several references to a red moon including , from Joel 2:31 , " The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes" . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_Blood_Moon_JGO_13.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures . 23/07/2013 . Manchester , UK . A blood red moon low over the skyline of Manchester , as seen tonight (23rd July 2013 ) with Manchester's iconic Beetham Tower in the foreground . The phenomenon can be caused by dust and pollution in the atmosphere and is most notable when the moon is low on the horizon as its light passes through a larger amount of atmosphere , which scatters blue light more than red . Biblical mythology makes several references to a red moon including , from Joel 2:31 , " The sun shall be turned to darkness, and the moon to blood, before the great and awesome day of the Lord comes" . Photo credit : Joel Goodman/LNP
    LNP_Blood_Moon_JGO_04.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_15.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_14.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_03.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_09.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_05.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_16.jpg
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 08/06/2018. Bristol, UK. Bristol artist LUKE JERRAM stands by his new sculpture "Inhale", his newest piece which is unveiled this week for Bristol's Festival of Nature. Jerram's Inhale sculpture is designed to make the damaging effects of air pollution visible to everyone. It is three metres high and represents a diesel soot particle, actual size one micron but magnified 3 million times. The sculpture is made out of coal, with pyrite and calcite representing larger particles such as from vehicle disc brakes, and tiny bits of glitter representing tiny chemicals in diesel soot, some of which are thought to be carcinogenic. Jerram said the inspiration for the piece came from the recent Volkswagen diesel scandal and a friend whose child suffers from asthma. He chose diesel soot as the focus of the artwork as diesel vehicles are a significant contributor towards air pollution in the UK and in Bristol, air pollution is thought to contribute to five deaths a week. The sculpture is making its first public appearance as part of the Festival of Nature in Bristol on the weekend of June 9-10, and has been commissioned by the University of the West of England as part of its Our City Our Health project, which aims to draw attention to the health impacts of poorly designed cities. Photo credit: Simon Chapman/LNP
    LNP_INHALE_SCULPTURE_180608_SCH_12.jpg
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_009.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_018.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_012.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_004.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Tejinder Virdee attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_026.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_024.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_020.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_019.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_017.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_014.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_011.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_005.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_023.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_021.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_016.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_001.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_027.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_022.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_013.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_008.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_006.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. New Nobel laureate Peter Higgs attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_002.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Tejinder Virdee attending the opening of the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London. Collider exhibition offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_025.JPG
  • © licensed to London News Pictures. London, UK 12/11/2013. Spectators interacting with the Collider exhibition at Science Museum in London, which offers a behind the scenes look at the CERN particle physics laboratory in Geneva and touches on the discovery of the 'God particle' theory of Peter Higgs. Photo credit: Tolga Akmen/LNP
    LNP_COLLIDER_TAK_015.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_005.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_004.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_007.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_002.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_006.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_003.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 04/07/2012. Melbourne, Australia. Top Physicists and Theorists gather in Melbourne, Australia, at the International Conference for High Energy Physics to watch the findings from C.E.R.N live via a weblink from Geneva as news of the existence of the Higgs boson particle was confirmed.. Photo credit : Samuel Richards/LNP
    LNP_HIGGS__MPIX_001.JPG
  • © Licensed to London News Pictures. 19/09/2013. Sheffield, UK  Scientists from the University of Sheffield believe they have found life arriving to Earth from space after sending a balloon to the stratosphere. The team, led by Professor (Hon. Cardiff and Buckingham Universities) Milton Wainwright, from the University’s Department of Molecular Biology and Biotechnology found small organisms that could have come from space after sending a specially designed balloon to 27km into the stratosphere during the recent Perseid meteor shower. Professor Wainwright said: “Most people will assume that these biological particles must have just drifted up to the stratosphere from Earth, but it is generally accepted that a particle of the size found cannot be lifted from Earth to heights of, for example, 27km. The only known exception is by a violent volcanic eruption, none of which occurred within three years of the sampling trip.. Photo credit : University of Shefflield/LNP
    LNP_Alien_LNP_0001.JPG
  • London, UK  22/04/2011. The sun starts to burn off smog over Canary Wharf from Greenwich. The UK government issues a smog warning, The alert was triggered by monitors on the traffic-choked Marylebone Road, whose readings breached European limits on ozone and pollutant particles linked to respiratory and other health problems.Ordinarily from this viewpoint can be seen Canary Wharf, The O2 Dome and the 'Gerkin'..Please see special instructions for usage rates. Photo credit should read TONY NANDI/LNP
    LNP_Greenwich_Smog_TNI_2.JPG
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg
  • **CAPTION CORRECTION - Clouds in this image are Nacreous clouds, not Sirrus clouds stated in earlier captions** © Licensed to London News Pictures.01/02/16<br />
<br />
Nacreous clouds, also known as mother-of-pearl clouds, give off an unusually array of colours over Saltburn-by-the-Sea. Nacreous clouds are seen mostly during winter at high latitudes like Scandinavia, Iceland, Alaska and Northern Canada and sit in the lower stratosphere some 15 - 25 km high, well above tropospheric clouds.<br />
<br />
Photo credit : Ian Forsyth/LNP
    LNP_Ice_Particle_Iridescence_IFO_000...jpg