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HART: MISSOURI RESEARCH PROJECT

 

Investigator: Gary Hart // Bloomington IL

 

Case Updates from an Ongoing Missouri Sightings Research Project:

(Photos for this report may be accessed from the photo album.)

 

Using a merged database for Missouri UFO and anomalous phenomena  reports of all types, I  have been conducting a private, long‑term  research effort to study the energy discharges present and measurable  when unexplained phenomena occurs. I'm now working in cooperation with    MIG, the Missouri Investigators Group, www.ufomig.com and NUFORC to  investigate new UFO sightings cases and this case brief is the result  of my investigating three recent NUFORC‑posted light sightings that I  found especially interesting.

 

While MIG and NUFORC collect general sightings data, I look to study  cases that contain particular factors common to other significant  sightings in my database. These factors include:   

 

1) Lights that can be easily categorized as to type.  

2) Sightings that seem to represent light‑types common to particular  areas of the state.

3) Sightings where a light or lights at some point in a sighting  assume a particular configuration‑type. 

4) Sightings occurring in areas that historically have a higher  sightings frequency.

 

A research protocol that mines a sighting database for sightings with  common factors by quick‑binning sightings into light and configuration  types can produce valid results even if the original sightings contain  significant detail. My work has enabled the development of several  cause and effect hypothesis which are being tested electronically  using experimental sensor and data acquisition equipment of my own  design.

 

The purpose of research is to establish fact and move beyond  speculation. The testing of advanced sensor systems for UFO and  anomalous phenomena work to my knowledge is only being done in two  other places in the world: to a limited extent in the Yakima WA area

and in Hessdalen Norway.  

 

The most common UFO sighting‑type in Missouri involves lights ranging  in color from white to orange and appearing singly or in rows. The  most common sightings region in Missouri is the southern third of the  state. The several recent cases that most closely resemble case‑types

currently under study in this region are these:

 

Occurred : 4/11/2002 22:00 (Entered as : 04/11/02 10:00pm)

Reported : 4/12/2002 7:39:23 PM 19:39

Location : Doniphan, MO

Sighted: Row of three orange lights

 

Occurred : 4/20/2002 22:00 (Entered as : 04/20/02 22:00)

Reported : 4/27/2002 7:30:48 PM 19:30

Location : Willow Springs, MO

Sighted: Two triangles of orange lights

 

Occurred : 6/17/2002 20:15 (Entered as : 06/17/02 20:15)

Reported : 6/17/2002 8:52:43 PM 20:52

Location : Licking, MO

Sighted: Row of three white lights

 

Since my case studies involve only particular pieces of information  relevant to a case, only this information is presented here. Contact  was established with the Doniphan MO observer. Additional information  collected: the row of lights were first seen reflecting off the water of a nearby pond; the thunder heard when the lights were sighted  stopped when the lights blinked out; the exact viewing location; the  exact viewing direction: west.

 

Unfortunately the Willow Springs case, though extremely interesting,  did not contain observer contact data so no correlation with other  sightings could be done. Based on my experience there is a dramatic under‑reporting of light sightings in southern Missouri because there  are several areas in this region whose history of light sightings far  exceed the number of publicly‑filed reports and lights in this area  can be seen from long distances. Observers should remember that every  report makes a difference when research is being done in frequent  sightings areas. Getting a scientific handle on the phenomena is much  more likely in these areas as compared to essentially random sightings  seen elsewhere.

 

Contact with the Licking MO witness found those persons to be have  been looking northwest, which could not be further correlated with  sightings data.

 

I am in contact with a diligent observer a number of miles to the  north and west of Doniphan. This person saw lights the same evening  from 9:35 to 10:10. To the northwest, a string of eight ambers; to the  north, several dozen large single amber lights; to the southeast, a  string of four ambers, then numerous single ambers to the south. The  observer also saw another light‑type identified as peculiar to this  region: a light appeared high in the northeast, sped west for three seconds, then did a hairpin turn to fly back to the east for three  more seconds before blinking out.

 

There is a high probability that the Doniphan observers and the  observer to the northwest saw the same row of lights as the individual  lights usually appear and disappear rapidly, taking the observer by  surprise. Plotting the sighting locations and viewing direction gives  an object position four miles from the Doniphan observers and  thirty‑two miles from the northern observer. This spot is near several  plotted micro‑quake epicenters and within a larger area where dozens  of small earthquakes have been plotted over the last several dozen  years indicating a interesting pattern of ongoing seismic instability    just one of several factors that can be related to the sightings  region given a triangulated location.

 

A project of instrumented data acquisition and study of this area is  underway. Pictures of lights taken on the night of 4‑11‑02 by one of  the observers are attached to this report. All photos are extreme  enlargements of 300 mm zoom photos using 1,600 ISO film, using a  1/15th second shutter speed. Fig. 1 shows light trails from a  diamond‑pattern of four lights, trails caused by both movement of  camera and  lights. Fig. 2 shows a single white light, a pulsating  light trail and an orange pair of light trails indicating the camera  was stationary and the movement from the lights themselves. Fig. 3 is  an enlargement of the pair of lights showing the apparently  energy‑stable rowed light configuration, but distinct individual  color, size and intensity variations can be seen. Individual lights  observed as circular in all cases. 

 


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