Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 30
Fata Morgana Mirage Turns Aircraft Carrier Into 'Huge Bear' Off Cornwall Coast
Updated
Updated · BBC.com · May 30

Fata Morgana Mirage Turns Aircraft Carrier Into 'Huge Bear' Off Cornwall Coast

6 articles · Updated · BBC.com · May 30
  • Mike Hancock of St Ives Boats said a distant aircraft carrier off Cornwall's north coast morphed into towering blocks, a bear-like shape and even a pi symbol as he sailed near Portreath and Pendeen.
  • The image drew online guesses that it showed a ship, crane or other object, but Hancock said the fast-changing form was a Fata Morgana — a rare superior mirage that can invert and stack distant images.
  • A Fata Morgana forms when freezing air is trapped beneath much warmer air, creating an atmospheric duct that bends light sharply; moving air layers then make the distorted image flicker in and out of focus.
  • Hancock said he had seen mirages before but never one like this off Cornwall, where the horizon briefly appeared tripled and bent — an effect linked historically to ghost-ship legends such as the Flying Dutchman.
As climate patterns shift, will the surreal Fata Morgana mirage become a more common danger for modern sailors?
Why does our brain see phantom ships and castles in the sky when viewing this bizarre atmospheric phenomenon?
If a mirage helped sink the Titanic, what other historical disasters could this optical illusion explain?