The 1889 Craven reports are interesting but that's also the period when sheep-worrying was a massive issue and there was genuine panic about large predators.
UK-based or UK-focused content preferred but not essentialThis is under-served honestly. Most paranormal content is American-centric.
The thermal anomalies you captured - what kind of camera were you using? I've been looking at investing in proper thermal equipment and want to know what's worth the money.
Look at the bigger picture though. Why would they deny Roswell? Why the Robertson Panel in 1953? Why the memo telling NATO countries to shut down UFO reporting lines?
I'm not asking for cryptids to be real, I'm genuinely curious about where the line between folklore, misidentification, and actual biology sits here.That's actually a really sensible framing.
If you're serious about methodology, you need to read up on parapsychology's ganzfeld experiments and statistical protocols.
we've had 55+ years of searching in the same region with modern technology and haven't found a single body, skeleton, or DNA sample Absence of evidence isn't evidence of absence though.
Good suggestion but honestly? Half the forum would just use it to post bollocks about their local Tesco car park. We need moderation standards first.
These moments seem to cluster around specific dates This is actually the interesting bit. If it's just random memory errors, they shouldn't cluster.
Right, I'm going to sound absolutely mental but I need to get this down somewhere because my mates at work think I've lost it.
Software can help with filtering and noise reduction, but it won't solve the fundamental problem of pareidolia. I'd recommend the 'backward masking' test - play your recordings backward.
Real talk: EMF readings on their own are basically meaningless for ghost hunting. You need to combine them with other data - temperature drops, EVP recordings, multiple witnesses experiencing...
Your mum's not wrong that it probably looks strange from the outside, but then so does every hobby. My brother-in-law spends a fortune restoring a car he never drives.