The inexplicable light of the Devil’s Path in Missouri

Deep in the backwoods of Missouri, an enigmatic ball of light haunting the area for more than a century…
Now two photographers captured the phenomenon in these amazing images.
The mysterious light appears after dusk, starting with a dim light that gradually turns into a blinding flash.
The locals describe it as a glowing ball that floats and which appears in the hills in the Ozarks, on the property known as the Walk of the Devil.
The inexplicable light in the Path of the Devil, as recorded by the Anton Ντόλεζαλ and Lara Shipley.
Some witnesses say that the light is a brilliant blue, while others insist that it is red. With regard to the origins, the explanations are many and varied: from a quantity of natural gas that escapes daily from an underground cavity with high pressure, up to an Unidentified Flying Object, and from the headless ghost of an Indian region or a pair of passionate lovers who look into each other’s eyes until the lights of passing cars from the highway 50.
Nothing, however, has not satisfactorily explained the origin of spectral light.
The same fruitless it was and a search made in the 1950’s the army Corps of Engineers of the United States.
Two photographers Lara Shipley and Anton Ντόλεζαλ, traveled to the region recently to document the stories of residents whose lives have been affected by the spectral light that haunts the town.
The appearance of the bullet starts from a dim light that gradually turns into a blinding flash.
The mysterious light photographed for the first time in the early 1900’s, the Walk of the Devil, a country road between southwestern Missouri and northeastern Oklahoma, near the town of Hornet. Most of the report that is displayed continuously from the end of the 19th century.
According to Wikipedia, the first meetings with light date back to the Path of Tears in the 1830s. It is a torturous road which they took at that time the Indians of the region, following the decision of the government, to relocate in Oklahoma.
On the way they died, some 60,000 of the 130,000 Indians Cherokee, as well as many african-americans.
Today it is generally accepted that the first documented record was in 1881 and the first public report of 1936 by the newspaper the Kansas City Star.
A professor from the University of Arkansas who investigated the phenomenon in the 1960s, stated that the light comes from a fixed source.
Noting that the area, which is located in the heart of the Belt of the Bible, it is extremely undervalued, with a large percentage of the youth find refuge in drugs.
What’s left of the research done in the 1950’s the army Corps of Engineers of the United States.