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Wednesday, 07 January 2009
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Mystery of the Min Min PDF Print E-mail
Written by queenslandhistory.com   

The Mystery of the Min Min

The Min Min Light is the grand-daddy of all such lights; the one everybody's heard of and every bushman claims to see. Min min is an Aboriginal word (for what no one is absolutely sure) but the light was not named by Aborigines. According to legend, it was named after the Min Min Hotel on the old coach road between Winton and Boulia in central western Queensland where it first appeared. There is, however, some doubt as to whether the light was named after the hotel, or the hotel after the light.

‘Hotel' is far too grand a title for the timber and corrugated iron shanty built last century to serve as a way-station for Cobb & Co. coaches. Most such places had bad reputations but the Min Min had the worst of any in the region. It reputedly served rot-gut liquor at exorbitant prices, doubled as a brothel and was the haunt of thieves, cattle rustlers and other assorted villains. Legend insists that many travellers and naive jackaroos disappeared there and that the small cemetery behind the hotel was conveniently provided to bury the evidence. So infamous did the Min Min become that someone put a match to it one dark night in 1917 and it burned to the ground ... or so the legend goes.

Reliable records, if they existed, would probably disprove most of the above and reveal a much more mundane history for this miserable little hostelry. Records do show the name of the last proprietor- a Mrs Hasted- but there is no real evidence that she presided over a branch office of Sodom or Gomorrah. Records also show that there were severe bush fires in the district in 1917 (Mrs Hasted's brother was badly burned fighting one), so it seems more likely that nature disposed of the Min Min Hotel and not a human avenger.

The generally accepted story of the first sighting of the Min Min Light belongs to later the same year when an hysterical stockman burst into Boulia Police Station at around midnight one night gabbling about being chased by a ghost. After the local constable calmed him down, the stockman told how he had been riding past the ruins of the Min Min Hotel at about 10 pm when a ball of light suddenly rose from the middle of the cemetery, hovered as if getting its bearings, then darted towards him. The stockman panicked, dug his boots in and galloped towards Boulia. Several times he looked over his shoulder and the light was still there. It followed him to the outskirts of the town, then disappeared.

In 1961 a reported sighting from 1912, predating the above (and the destruction of the hotel) by five years, came to light. Henry Lamond, one-time manager of Warenda Station on whose land the hotel stood, claimed that he had seen the light in the winter of that year on the Warenda road. Its appearance had at first alarmed him, but when he realised his horse was quite unperturbed by it Lamond decided his own fear was unwarranted.

There have been so many reported sightings since then that it would take most of this article to recount them all. Station owners and managers, policemen, ministers of religion, school teachers, shopkeepers and no-nonsense bushmen have seen the Min Min Light; most of them are intelligent, sober and honest people whose credibility is unquestionable. All describe it as a round or oval ball of light glowing so it illuminates its surroundings, travelling between one and two metres above the ground either in a straight or undulating line. Sometimes it appears to stop and hover; sometimes it bobs about and usually dives towards the earth as it disappears.

There are almost as many theories about its origin as sightings and, as they apply equally to the many other ghost lights recorded in this article, it's appropriate to discuss them. The supernatural school claim that such lights are spirits of the dead, ghosts in inhuman form. Sceptics with some knowledge of the bush suggest that the lights may emanate from fluorescent fungi (such do exist) or from birds who have brushed their wings against the fungi. Fireflies are also cited as are swarms of moths, their wings reflecting moonlight. None of these is likely. The only common bush birds that hover (eagles and hawks) are not nocturnal. A swarm of moths would not be visible at any great distance and fireflies? Well, there's no doubting their ability to emit light but as one bushman put it: ‘You'd need about ten million of the little blighters, standing shoulder to shoulder, to produce a light that bright.'

Traditional science groups the Min Min and other Australian lights along with European and North American Will-o'-the-wisps and Jack- O'-lanterns into the category i gnis fatuus (which simply means ‘foolish fire') and attributes them to marsh gas (CH4) or phosphuretted hydrogen, the gas that escapes from decaying animal matter. As the Min Min Light was said to originate in a cemetery the presence of the latter was possible once, but its domain is far too arid to produce marsh gas. Subterranean gas escaping through fissures or drill holes s more likely and records show the Min Min Hotel was built beside a water bore, but all theories involving gas rely on the premise that the gas somehow self-ignites, which is impossible.

That very rare natural phenomenon, ‘ball' lightning, which travels across the landscape at high speed has also been suggested as an explanation but, like all lightning, it dissipates quickly and never remains visible for as long as these lights are claimed to. Others suggest the lights are a type of mirage, however, the kind of mirage seen in daylight, which is reflection of the sky on a layer of hot air, cannot occur after dark. Apart from the fact that a reflection of the night sky would be invisible and a reflection of the moon (if that were possible) would be identified as the moon, the lights appear on cold nights, cloudy nights and moonless nights.

Some very distinguished scientists have studied the phenomenon, arriving in Boulia in a flurry of publicity and making claims of infallible theories, but most have not even managed to see the light let alone explain it. The novelist H. G. Wells took an interest in it while visiting Australia, but even his fertile mind could not come up with an explanation. Probably the most plausible theory to emerge in recent years came from Colin Croft of Charleville, who discovered that he could see a grass fire at night that was at least 80 kilometres away and below the horizon. Croft claimed that what he saw was a reflection of the fire on a layer of hot air that had risen at sundown and was hanging in the upper atmosphere. This ties in with an old theory that said the light only appeared when a lighted lamp was placed in a window at Lucknow, the nearest station homestead to the Min Min Hotel.

While scientists argue and country folk speculate, the sightings continue. Tourists report the light following their cars and campers put the billy on in readiness to offer a cuppa to the rider of the motorbike they think is approaching. A group of station hands on horseback claimed they cornered the light one night a few years back and played phantom polo with it!

If the reader feels inclined to go Min Min Light watching, take the Kennedy Development Road (the locals call it ‘the Winton Beef Road') from Boulia. Cross the Hamilton River, then just west of the boundary between Warenda and Lucknow is the site of the old Min Min Hotel. The old coach road is about 500 metres north of the present road and there's not much left of the ruins, just a scattering of broken glass and some rusting rails around the cemetery. It's not the most pleasant place to be after dark, but your perseverance just might be rewarded with a glimpse of the legendary light.

With thanks to : http://www.queenslandhistory.com/ghosts1.htm



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