Perkinson, William J. (1966 թ․ նոյեմբերի 11). «Optical illusions among strange effects of weather; winds give cold its severity». The Evening Sun. Baltimore, Maryland. էջ C1. Վերցված է 2018 թ․ հուլիսի 2-ին – via Newspapers.com. «October is also the month when Antarctica's equivalent of the desert mirage occurs most frequently. On four of the five days during which the blizzard blew continuously, the Fata Morgana appeared and lasted from four to twelve hours. That's when phantom cliffs and coast lines are plainly visible. Mountains take on strange shapes, sometimes appearing to grow atop each other upside down. Other mountains seem displaced as peaks 120 miles [190 km] away or more can be seen as if they were just across the ice-covered McMurdo Sound. The Fata Morgana, Chief Horner explained, is an optical illusion caused when the air is clear by the fact that the air aloft is warmer than the air at the surface of Antarctica.»
«El Pasoan studies Antarctica weather». El Paso Herald–Post. 1973 թ․ փետրվարի 19. էջ B–1. Վերցված է 2018 թ․ հուլիսի 2-ին – via Newspapers.com. «All the Navy weathermen at Detachment 'C' agree that the most startling weather phenomena they have encountered in Antarctica is 'Fata Morgana,' an optimal illusion that is caused by a temperature inversion over the ice and which makes everything look like a mirage and appear distorted or stretched. 'It's amazing to look out towards the Ross Ice Shelf and see Mount Discovery or the Royal Society Mountain Range look almost inverted or stretched out for miles,' Miller said»
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White, Calvin S. (1937 թ․ մայիսի 16). «U.S.S.R. Opens Far North». The New York Times. Վերցված է 2011 թ․ նոյեմբերի 4-ին.