GEOMAGNETIC STORM Hits Earth Today, Historians Draw Chilling Comparisons to the "Carrington Event" of 1859
As the planet braces for the impact of a severe geomagnetic storm, experts are drawing a direct line to the most infamous solar tempest in recorded history: the 1859 Carrington Event. While today's storm is not expected to be as cataclysmic, historians warn that the eerie similarities in solar activity patterns echo the build-up to that legendary electromagnetic pulse which set telegraph stations ablaze and lit up the night sky as far south as Cuba. In 1859, the world was wired with copper; today, it is governed by satellites and silicon—making our modern civilization far more vulnerable to a repeat performance. As auroras dance over New York and London, scientists are watching the data, whispering that history is not just repeating itself, but *knocking at the door*.