Gen_Hazard t1_j2iw1gw wrote
Reply to comment by Smooth_Detective in Ancient Chinese text reveals earliest known record of auroral display, described as a ‘five-colored light’ event in either 977 or 957 BCE by marketrent
China can get pretty far North.
RegentYeti t1_j2jewkj wrote
I just looked it up, the northernmost point in China that I could find is at roughly the same latitude as Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
HiiohoiHalojata t1_j2jnpa1 wrote
Aurora ovals are centered around geomagnetic poles and not geographic poles. The northern one is tilted heavily towards North America so the chance to see auroras at 53° N China is the same as in Indianapolis (39.7° N)
gob0 t1_j2jqzs7 wrote
Was it so heavily tilted towards North America in 900 BC?
HiiohoiHalojata t1_j2ju2wb wrote
That's a great point. Although the north magnetic pole has wandered quite a lot during the past 100 years, the geomagnetic pole has stayed relatively still. However, 3000 years is still a long time so it's definitely possible it was way closer to the geographic poles.
I didn't find any information about its location before 1900. The magnetic pole (not geomagnetic pole) was actually even more tilted towards North America at around 1600 than now
SweetSoursop t1_j2kxpb4 wrote
And on the same parallel as London, Amsterdam and most of Germany.
[deleted] t1_j2m1tzo wrote
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Atharaphelun t1_j2js4pv wrote
Ancient China (that is, pre-Imperial China), not so much. China had yet to expand far beyond the "Central Plain" at this point in time (early Zhou dynasty, aka Western Zhou period).
[deleted] t1_j2lo38a wrote
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Gen_Hazard t1_j2w4853 wrote
Interesting, thank you!
ohea t1_j2kmxwc wrote
Not in the 10th century BC it didn't. Back then, modern Beijing/Hebei was just about the northern limit of Chinese civilization.
thankyoufatmember t1_j2lfx7c wrote
It's a country full over both beautiful nature and weather phenomenology
[deleted] t1_j2qndbt wrote
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