Earth Changes
Natalie Richardson was passing through with her mum yesterday when they noticed the phenomena in the sky, saying it was slowing changing colour for about 15 minutes.
"Thought the country should know because it's amazing! Never seen it before!" she said.
MetService meteorologist Tui McInnes said the rainbow was in fact a phenomena called a Circumhorizontal Arc.
"Basically what happens is sunlight enters the cloud and ice crystals in the cloud refract the light and form a rainbow," she said.

A dead humpback whale washed up on the shore in Tsawwassen Friday.
The carcass of the mammal was discovered in shallow waters near the BC Ferries terminal in Tsawwassen Friday morning.
The whale was reported to authorities, triggering a response from the Department of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) and the Tsawwassen First Nation.
"We'll look at the body condition, see if the animal's emaciated," said Paul Cottrell, the local marine mammal coordinator for the DFO told CTV Vancouver.
"It's really important to figure out what's happened to this animal and why it's died and make sure if there's an anthropogenic cause - human cause - what that is."
Thirteen more people were confirmed dead from the "Camp Fire" in Paradise, northern California, taking the toll in that area to 42 and making it the deadliest fire in California history.
Paradise, some 90 miles (145 km) north of Sacramento, has been completely destroyed by the blaze, with the authorities saying that up to 90 percent of the residents lost their homes. The death toll is expected to rise.
An estimated quarter million Californians have been forced to flee their homes to escape the three blazing infernos across the state. Strengthening winds mean the flames are expected to spread even further by Tuesday. So far, the fires have spread to some 400 square miles (1,040 square km) as some 8,000 firefighters are still unable to contain the inferno.
Comment: A total of 7,177 buildings have been destroyed, Cal Fire said. High winds and dry conditions threaten more areas through the rest of the week, fire officials warned. The total cost to the state, insurers and homeowners is expected to top $19 billion.
See also:
- Deaths in California wildfires at 25 - More "devil winds" on the way - Choking air quality - 250,000 evacuated
- California wildfires: Nine dead in most destructive inferno in a century - Celebrities flee Malibu mansions - UPDATES
Casualties of the deadliest wildfire in California's history continue to mount, with eight more bodies found Friday bringing the official count to 71. Over 1,000 people have been reported missing, Butte County Sheriff said.More videos have emerged showing the devastation:
The shocking figure, up from some 630 listed missing the day before, may include some duplicate names, Sheriff Honea hopes. The Camp Fire has been raging for over a week across northern California, razing over 142,000 acres and laying waste the town of Paradise and its environs.
President Trump is expected to visit California on Saturday to survey the damage with Governor Jerry Brown. Trump has criticized the state's management of its forests and rivers, even as thousands of firefighters mobilized to try to control the blaze, which remains only around 45 percent contained.
The Camp Fire broke out last Thursday morning in Pulga and quickly spread due to dry and windy weather conditions. California utility PG&E Corporation appeared to have shouldered some of the blame, admitting to regulators earlier this week they had been experiencing problems with their equipment near the origin of the fire. Multiple victims have filed lawsuits alleging negligence and improper maintenance.
Trump's visit could not come at a more chaotic time. Nearly 500 searchers, including a mobile rapid-analysis DNA lab and cadaver dogs, are combing through the ashes in search of the missing, armed with DNA from their relatives. Over 50,000 people remain evacuated from their homes, while thick smoke from the fire has reportedly earned northern California the distinction of the worst air quality in the world. Schools as far away as San Francisco and San Jose are closed because of the hazardous conditions, and authorities have advised residents not to go outside without a mask for several more days.
As fire-fighting efforts continue there are new fears over potential mudslides such as those experienced earlier this year. See: California Mudslides, a Sign of Worse to Come?
See also: Study: Wildfire seasons are more destructive and lasting longer almost everywhere on Earth
Update: RT on November 18th
The death toll from the worst-ever California wildfires has increased to 76, while the list of those unaccounted-for continues to grow and has jumped to 1,276, even as authorities located hundreds of previously missing persons.
While the list of casualties and missing persons continues to rise, Butte County officials expressed the hope that there might be ID duplication, or that many of those unaccounted for are alive but simply unaware that they had been reported missing. But even though authorities managed to locate over 700 people previously believed missing, with hundreds of new reports the toll has grown to 1,276.
The Camp Fire in Paradise has now destroyed around 13,000 structures after ripping through roughly 149,000 acres since November 8.
Meanwhile the Woolsey Fire in Southern California has resulted in at least three deaths after burning through some 98,000 acres of land. This fire, which is now 82 percent contained, destroyed at least 836 structures.

A man in Tasmania has died from a heart attack after a suspected stingray puncture wound to his abdomen. Stingrays are generally not considered aggressive.
Attempts to resuscitate the man, who suffered a cardiac arrest on Saturday afternoon in the waters at Lauderdale beach, east of Hobart, were unsuccessful, police said.
"He was removed from the water by friends prior to the arrival of emergency services," the Tasmanian police said in a statement.
"It was reported he was unaccompanied in the water at the time of sustaining a puncture wound to his lower abdomen."
People in mountainous villages in Florina, Naoussa, Pelion, Trikala, Grevena, Metsovo and even as south as Nafpaktia and Arcadia woke up and found everything covered in snow, with meteorologists predicting that the temperatures will remain low until Monday.

The twister was captured by local resident Alesha Plew as she and her husband were driving along State Highway 1 north of Ashburton.
The twister was captured by local resident Alesha Plew as she and her husband Richard were driving along State Highway 1 north of Ashburton.
So what do these wilfully incurious believers say now that the heavens have opened up (again) with massive snow falls over the European Alps and north-eastern United States?
See, for 20 years, the top global warming alarmists were warning us there would be no snow.
In 2000, for instance, came this famous prediction from the then centre of global warming alarmism:
According to Dr David Viner, a senior research scientist at the climatic research unit (CRU) of the University of East Anglia, within a few years winter snowfall will become "a very rare and exciting event".
"Children just aren't going to know what snow is," he said.
Comment: See also these recent November reports: At least 7 killed as powerful snowstorm blasts across huge swath of US
Mid-Hudson Valley hit by early snowstorm with up to 14 inches measured
Heavy snowfall in Turkey - up to 2 feet
Cold weather gives Texas earliest snowfall ever recorded - 7 inches in the Panhandle
Up to 130cm (51 inches) of snow has fallen in Labrador and winter hasn't even begun
Loveland Ski area in Colorado receives historic seasonal snowfall - almost 7 feet so far
Rescue operation has been delayed as uprooted trees trees fell on the road. The officials were making efforts to recover the bodies.
According to officials, the Gaja cyclone has created a lot of damage in Dindigul district and Kodaikanal was also badly hit.
Bob Long had no idea he was stalking such a rare beast when he took aim in Ballard County, northern Kentucky, on Sunday. All he could see were a set of massive antlers.
It was only when he approached his kill that he realized just how unique it was. Long had shot a buck deer that appeared to have two heads with entwined antlers.
It turned out that the two-headed deer was not a newly discovered species or conjoined deer twins. It appears that the buck had been walking around with another deer's rotting carcass stuck to his head before he was shot.
A video posted by the Greenville Police Department shows the sinkhole police estimate to be 10 feet deep that exposed an underground gas line.
"Crews are here making sure pieces of overhanging concrete don't drop on the gas lines, which could open them up. As soon as the concrete is secured, at least one southbound lane will re-open on Haywood Road," the department said on Facebook
A S.C. Department of Transportation engineer told WYFF that he estimated the sinkhole to actually be about 20 feet deep and 50 feet long.













Comment: Two days earlier a young killer whale was found dead on Nootka Island in the same province.