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Australian Sky Turns an Apocalyptic Blood Red
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Australian Sky Turns an Apocalyptic Blood Red

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Winds from Tropical Cyclone Narelle stirred up rust-colored dust from iron-rich soil, tinging the sky over Western Australia with a reddish Mars-like hue.

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Advertisement SKIP ADVERTISEMENT Supported by SKIP ADVERTISEMENT Australian Sky Turns an Apocalyptic Blood Red Winds from Tropical Cyclone Narelle stirred up rust-colored dust from iron-rich soil, tinging the sky over Western Australia with a reddish Mars-like hue. Listen · 2:06 min Share full article By Johnny Diaz March 29, 2026, 3:49 p.m. ET Videos and images of a fiery red sky over Western Australia looked like something from an apocalyptic or science fiction movie. At the Shark Bay Caravan Park in Denham, the sky glowed bright red on Friday and drew out curious residents to gaze at the dazzling display, according to a video shared by the park. “Incredibly eerie outside and everything is covered in dust,” the park said on Facebook. The color change took place “as dust filled the air ahead of Tropical Cyclone Narelle,” according to AccuWeather, the American company that provides global commercial weather forecasting services. It added, “No, that’s not a filter!” The soil in Australia, which has a hot and dry environment, is iron-rich and undergoes a weathering process of oxidation, according to the National Environmental Satellite, Data and Information Service, a division of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in the United States. “In this type of environment, these rocks actually begin to rust,” the service said. “As the rust expands, it weakens the rock and helps break it apart.” That process gives the dirt its reddish Mars-like hue, the service said. The colored dust was then most likely scattered by the storm’s winds. The cyclone was downgraded to a tropical low pressure area after it brought rain and winds to Western Australia on Saturday, according to the Bureau of Meteorology in Australia. The skies occasionally turn red because of cyclones, dust storms and wildfires. There was a similar scene in 2019 when a fire raged along the east coast of Australia and the daytime sky turned black and then blood red. Also in 2019, the sky turned red in...
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