1971 Lake Cote / Lago de Cote UFO Aerial Photo

Perhaps it was just an artifact of the filming and developing process, but it looks to me more like a deliberate creation. Either way, it seems to have been deliberately represented at some time as something that it's not, so it's still a hoax.
Metabunk and it's community are a great resource for examining and analyzing imaging problems and for worrying out the details of a given complex scenario. But sometimes when I read these threads it reminds me of a group of people in lab coats standing around trying to figure out how someone got a jackrabbit to mate with an antelope.
"It's a hoax", while sometimes true, is often the lazy way to dismiss a thing. That's usually what we DON'T do here. If it's a hoax, we want to know how and why it was done before drawing that conclusion. If it's a mistake, a misidentification, a genuinely strange thing, we want to know that as well. People throw their initial ideas into the ring for discussion first before they are "tested to destruction".
 
Perhaps it was just an artifact of the filming and developing process, but it looks to me more like a deliberate creation. Either way, it seems to have been deliberately represented at some time as something that it's not, so it's still a hoax.
It is not a hoax if it was presented in good faith and was not intentionally faked. It could still be any of several things, including a hoax. But just saying "It is a hoax" is not evidence that it is one! Earlier you'd posted about double exposure and a high hat cymbal. Can you walk me through how that would be done, using the system that was used to make this photo. |

I'd suggest being a bit cautious about conflating "it looks like a thing" with "it is that thing." It does indeed look something like a cymbal. It also looks rather a lot like a conchoidal fracture in a pane of glass -- when I first saw it, I was pretty sure that's what it was. Later evidence convinced me that was not the case -- but it still looks a lot like one!

delme.jpg


Heck, it looks a LOT like this illustration of something to do with flint knapping:
https://www.chegg.com/homework-help...s-stone-tools-artifacts-due-resista-q36460622
delme2.jpg

I don't think that's what it is.

Metabunk and it's community are a great resource for examining and analyzing imaging problems and for worrying out the details of a given complex scenario. But sometimes when I read these threads it reminds me of a group of people in lab coats standing around trying to figure out how someone got a jackrabbit to mate with an antelope.
That may be an unavoidable side effect of the process, especially if you really would prefer a simple solution. But as you note, the technique does seem to yield results.
 
@DarkLight

A hoaxer would've have to create fake aerial images in an obscure format, that are not possible to make if you are not in an aircraft using a dedicated camera, photographing the scenes.
Unless you believe it was recreated using models and such.. I am not seeing this a real option.
I think it is an artefact, as we discussed very early in this thread. We just don't have a good way in making sure it was.
 
Metabunk and it's community are a great resource for examining and analyzing imaging problems and for worrying out the details of a given complex scenario. But sometimes when I read these threads it reminds me of a group of people in lab coats standing around trying to figure out how someone got a jackrabbit to mate with an antelope.

But for most of us, that's a fun part of it all. These are puzzles to be worked out. I would also argue that good debunking is accurate debunking, or at least as accurate as possible.

If someone presented a "jack-a-lope" as curiosity or gaff, we likely wouldn't spend much time on it. If, like many UFO, paranormal and cryptid claims, someone presented a "jack-a-lope" as evidence of a real animal, we may in fact put on our virtual lab coats to understand if it's a hoax and if so how was it done. Maybe it's not a hoax, but a rabbit with Shopes rabbit papilloma virus, which is real and causes horn like growths on some rabbits:

1774560086688.png


External Quote:

The Shope papilloma virus (SPV), also known as cottontail rabbit papilloma virus (CRPV) or Kappapapillomavirus 2, is a papillomavirus which infects certain species of rabbit and hare, causing cancerous lesions (carcinomas) resembling horns, typically on or near the animal's head.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shope_papilloma_virus

Jack-a-lopes are known hoax and it's likely anyone presenting one as a real creature is presenting a hoax, but not necessarily. If in fact they are presenting a CRPV infected rabbit, dismissing it as a hoax is inaccurate.

Similarly with the Cote Lago UFO, it may be a hoax, created with known objects and a double exposure. Or it may be an artifact from the camera, or the making of analog copies of the negatives, or a number of other things. Figuring out exactly, or as close as possible, to what we are actually seeing, isn't just a fun puzzle, it's a good exercise in proper debunking.
 
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