The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch: Experiment Triggers MYSTERIOUS Thermal Anomaly (S4)
The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch: Experiment Triggers MYSTERIOUS Thermal Anomaly (S4)
We invited technologist David Mason and
local fire management officer Don
Mitchell back out to help us with a
pretty ambitious experiment we wanted to
conduct between the triangle and the
south field.
Because we’ve documented so many
phenomena this year between the triangle
where we saw the blob-like anomaly,
Homestead 2 where we uncovered lines of
strange materials similar to what we
found in the Mesa, and the south field
where we’ve seen numerous UAPs and found
mutilated deer carcasses, we’re hoping we
can stimulate more strange things to
appear, but this time identify just what
they are.
So what I’ve done is I’ve brought eight
thermal imaging cameras and two of them
are high resolution, so if anything
anomalous appears, just a slight
temperature change, we’ll be able to see
it much more clearly than just using
conventional thermal camera technology.
That is real cool. Awesome! So if it’s got
a thermal signature, we’re going to get
it.
Caleb and I have converted a truck
into a mobile rocket and mortar launcher.
We’re going to fire off payloads
reaching more than 100 feet in the air
starting at the triangle. Meanwhile, David
Mason, Eric, and the guys will observe
everything using eight thermal cameras.
They’ll be able to detect anything that
might suddenly change in temperature and
that we can’t see with the naked eye.
Depending on what happens after our
launches at the triangle, we’ll move to
the south field and repeat the
experiment there. They’re on there pretty
good. Oh, it’s ratchet strapped in; it
ain’t going nowhere. We’re going to do
both launch and mortar. Yeah, so I’ll get
on this side and launch, if you get on
that side and fire off the mortars. Yeah,
it makes sense. Complete? Eric, you copy?
Yeah, go ahead, Travis.
Yeah, man, we’re ready to launch a
rocket, and we’re going to fire mortars at
the same time.
Okay, stand by. I’m going to turn on the 1.6
gigahertz sweep. All right, then we’re
good to go. You ready to go, Dave?
I’m ready to go. Okay, go ahead and launch.
Rocket is hot. Mortars are ready.
In five, four, three, two, one.
[Music]
Yeah, they’re little, they’re going to run
over each other. Well, that one just hit.
Yeah, that rocket flew right into that mortar.
How did that happen? Oh, wow, I don’t know
how to explain that. Well, it’s falling
pretty fast.
That’s not good. Oh, wow.
Did you guys see that too? I got it on
camera. Yeah, Thomas had eyes on that. The
mortar went off right about that 31-foot
mark. It looked like the mortar went off
as the rocket was flying through it.
Right after we launched a rocket and a
mortar to stimulate the blob anomaly 31
feet above the triangle, something
clearly made the mortar explode
prematurely and the rocket break into
pieces, and it looked like it happened
exactly at that 31-foot level. The odds
of that happening are crazy. We couldn’t
be sure what it was, so I wanted to
immediately launch a series of mortars
directly through that 31-foot zone to
see if they would hit something or make
something clearly appear for David’s
thermal cameras.
Hey Eric, you copy?
Yeah, go ahead.
We’ve got mounted on top of the launch
tower, and we’re going to fire it.
Ready to go ahead with the launch?
Yeah, it’s got to be the right height.
There’s something right there.
Travis, we’re examining a feature in
Dave’s differential flare camera. This
remarkable differential thermal camera
forms an image, we get a color that
corresponds to the temperature. If
anything should come out as warmer, it
will become bright yellow or even white.
What we’re seeing here in the thermal is
an anomaly that shows up warmer than the
surrounding area. This is very
interesting to me. I really wanted to
know if we may have stimulated another
blob anomaly in the sky between the
triangle and the south field, so we
needed to head closer to that location
and conduct more launches to see if we
could get it to reappear and verify what
it was.
Hey guys, we’re in place. Uh, down
here, we’re about to shoot, uh, some orders.
Just got to get an idea of the windage
on how to launch a rocket from here.
Copy that.
You ready?
Dave, are you set?
Yeah, yes, we are ready.
All right, we’re going to light the mortars
in five, four, three,
one.
Oh yeah.
Got it.
Do you see that right there,
Thomas? Yeah, I’d love to get your eyes on
this, this one here.
We have been tracking this light.
Travis, uh, we’re trying to identify an
object down on the south side above the
trees. Uh, we’re not quite sure what we’re
looking at. I think I’m picking it up on
the differential, uh, FLIR.
You’re picking it up too, yeah.
That was where Eric was seeing something
in his camera.
Let’s see this.
For Travis or…
It was right, right here, and that’s where
you saw the luminous object in one of
your cameras. That’s where I, that’s where
I aimed it.
So we have something that’s got a heat
signature. This is where you were seeing
that light source, and I got it aimed.
This is a vehicle. This is Travis. These
are the cows.
I watch it again. You’ll see it just
start to manifest just in that spot, and
then you can see it pulsing.
Just blinks in and out as cold,
and now it’s hotter.
It’s changing temperature. It goes cold
or warm, cold or warm, but why is it
varying?
Wow.
We have something in the thermographic
camera in the same location we saw a
light in the near infrared. So what are
we seeing here? What’s causing this to
happen? That’s what makes this experiment
so interesting to me personally.
You see it?
Oh yeah, I’m not seeing it.
Hey.
Yeah, go ahead, Travis. Well, so we are
trying to find the light, but we’re not
seeing it right now.
Yeah, go ahead. Three, two, one. Oh.
Got it.
I see the rocket trail, but I don’t see…
Oh, there it is.
It’s coming in hot.
Oh, I could hear that. Oh yeah, gosh.
Do we still have it? Are you seeing it?
It’s faded out.
I don’t think it’s there anymore.
Did it fade out after the launch?
Yeah.
It disappeared.
Where’d it go?
Hey, Travis, that object that we were
looking at,
it’s completely gone.
That’s just so weird.
I’ll say we load up and head back that
way and see what they’ve got. Sounds good
to me.
I think tonight was a success because
the experiment appears to have triggered
phenomena both at the 31-foot altitude
above the triangle where we saw the blob-
like anomaly earlier this year and over
the south field where so many other
strange things have recently happened.
Were these anomalies connected? What were
they, and where do they come from? Since
moments after they appeared, they simply
just vanished. Thanks for coming out and
for your amazing equipment. This has been
fantastic. Thank you.