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The northern lights dazzled Toronto and southern Ontario overnight Thursday | CBC News

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The northern lights dazzled Toronto and southern Ontario overnight Thursday | CBC News

Torontonians may be used to bright lights, but Thursday night was brighter — and prettier — than usual.

Due to a geomagnetic storm, the northern lights were visible around Toronto and parts of southern Ontario late Thursday evening into Friday morning.

In Toronto, CBC’s Nicole Mortillaro photographed the lights dancing above The Beaches in the city’s east end Thursday night. The Balmy Beach Club is visible in the distance.

(Nicole Mortillaro/CBC)

Even above the downtown lights and the CN Tower, the red hue of the Aurora shone through.

The CN Tower and downtown Toronto are visible in the distance at night. In the foreground, the silhouette of a beach and trees. In the sky, the faint red of the Northern Lights
(Nicole Mortillaro/CBC)

Over near the Scarborough Bluffs, CBC’s Rozenn Nicolle got a shot of a bright green sky above the waters of Bluffers Park Marina.

The northern lights shine above a lake and cottage in Scarborough, streaking the evening sky with bright greens
(Nicolle Rozenn/CBC)

And further north, though not as far as one might expect, CBC Toronto’s Lane Harrison caught an even more dazzling light show in Bracebridge, Ont., Thursday.

The Northern Lights cover the night sky in purple, with small streaks of green. The silhouette of evergreen trees cover the bottom third of the sky
(Lane Harrison/CBC)

The town is about 150 kilometres north of Toronto, and the rural sky made for an even more brilliant canvas.

The Northern Lights streak across the night sky, green and pink, above the silhouette of a forest and telephone pole.
(Lane Harrison/CBC)

The northern lights, or aurora borealis, are caused by solar particles that are flung from the sun toward the Earth by an explosion of energy on the sun’s surface called a coronal mass ejection.

This year they’ve been surprisingly active in southwestern Ontario, with solar activity also making them highly visible in parts of the region back in May.

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