It was a rough guess of the height of the buildings at the mine.Why did you use a target height of 150ft?
It was a rough guess of the height of the buildings at the mine.Why did you use a target height of 150ft?
Broken Arrow is the code name used for a missing nuclear weapon or accidental nuclear explosion by the US military as well and there was a John Woo movie based on that premise with the same name.Wow. Broken Arrow was an old TV show I watched as a kid. You never know what my stutter will bring up.
....disappeared before like one by one. The lights went off and now they're back on.
And they're just like hanging out, out there and that is pretty freaking big.
They're getting like closer and there's more of them.
All true. But this is what I saw all those times as a kid.Broken Arrow is the code name used for a missing nuclear weapon or accidental nuclear explosion by the US military as well and there was a John Woo movie based on that premise with the same name.
Damn, ZW, you're nearly as old as I am! That was my little sister's favorite show.But this is what I saw all those times as a kid.
Sorry, yes, lots of new things going in. Can you share the sitch that is slow for you?Sitrec is being a pain, slows my computer right down and wont let me get the camera low enough 0ft AGL is still ~10 feet up or so
@Mick West not sure if you are working on anything?
Broken Arrow is the code name used for a missing nuclear weapon or accidental nuclear explosion by the US military as well and there was a John Woo movie based on that premise with the same name.
The nighttime satellite imagery confirms the mine is very bright. Here's the clearest image during the timeframe of Dav's trip.View attachment 89894
There's a faint but visible in several portions light here that maintains distance and level with the main light cluster, which would seem to support a fixed location
I think this location would fit.could this be the location? This is facing West.
https://maps.app.goo.gl/enLPH4dpY8LtDx5Z8
View attachment 89882
View attachment 89883
Looks exactly right - even this branch on the right just next to the marker pole is still present.
It only took like 10 minutes maybe to find this location. If anyone is interested, this was my method:Looks exactly right - even this branch on the right just next to the marker pole is still present.
View attachment 89905
Thank you very much for looking into this, all of you!
(and for correcting my spelling)
I've commented on the video accordingly, let's see what they say.
I really like Bob Bledsoe, I've learned a ton about snakes from him, but he's a bit too credulous on weird stuff... I try just to enjoy the podcast as storytelling.
(His episode on Men in Black is good fun though, even for a skeptic)
Gonna guess no metadata, I downloaded them and they have none, but they also have different filenames from the view as attachments, so not sure if it is stripping the metadata here?So I reached out to Bob Bledsoe and sent him a link to this thread. This was his response. He has also shared the original videos that Dav sent him and has given me permission to share them here.
View attachment 89915
Bob may find the autokinetic illusion useful for understanding the perception of motion in a dark desert environment. The effect is amplified unconsciously by social influence as wellSo I reached out to Bob Bledsoe and sent him a link to this thread. This was his response. He has also shared the original videos that Dav sent him and has given me permission to share them here.
View attachment 89915
The autokinetic effect (also referred to as autokinesisand the autokinetic illusion) is a phenomenon of visual perception in which a stationary, small point of light in an otherwise dark or featureless environment appears to move.[1] […] It is presumed to occur because motion perception is always relative to some reference point, and in darkness or in a featureless environment there is no reference point, so the position of the single point is undefined. The direction of the movements does not appear to be correlated with involuntary eye movements, but may be determined by errors between eye position and that specified by efference copy of the movement signals sent to the extraocular muscles. […]
The amplitude of the movements is also undefined. Individual observers set their own frames of reference to judge amplitude (and possibly direction). Because the phenomenon is labile, it has been used to show the effects of social influence or suggestion on judgements. For example, if an observer who would otherwise say the light is moving one foot overhears another observer say the light is moving one yard, then the first observer will report that the light moved one yard. Discovery of the influence of suggestion on the autokinetic effect is often attributed to Sherif (1935), but it was recorded by Adams (1912), if not others.[citation needed]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Autokinetic_effect