The bit that always stuck with me about this case is the yellow light. Not the weather shift, not the aircraft - the specific quality of the light Carey described.
Not my field really but I do find it interesting that 800Hz keeps coming up. That frequency range sits right in the middle of the human voice formant region which is probably why some researchers...
@Jonesy288 the fifth floor thing is well documented, loads of people report that same sensation - not the screaming terror stuff you see on TV, just this low-level wrongness that you can't quite...
@grizzled_weasel your post got cut off mate, but I'll say this - Lake Tahoe has a surprisingly consistent history of sighting reports going back decades.
@ManchesterHermit sorry for your loss mate, three years and that probably still hits hard.
What you're describing fits something researchers call "post-death communication" - it's...
Honestly the methodology question is the most important one in paranormal research and most investigators avoid it. Happy to have someone willing to engage with it seriously.
Brilliant work on the data compilation. The motorway corridor angle is really interesting - suggests possible transport or escape incidents.
LocalLegendHunter: Biologist, nice. That's genuinely useful perspective. A lot of the cryptid reports from Yorkshire and Lancashire could use someone who actually understands animal biology rather...
The most honest answer is: we don't know. The classified documents we've seen don't prove aliens, but they prove something occurred that the military took seriously.
Right, I've been digging through old newspaper archives from the 1800s and there's a surprising number of reports of large, hairy bipedal creatures reported across Dartmoor.
I'm fascinated by this. Planning a trip up there myself in a couple weeks. Do you remember roughly where on the path the cold spot was?
Would actual cryptid researchers find that offensive? Like, you're turning a genuine mystery into fancy dress? Ha, no.
The consistency in descriptions might just be because people are reading previous reports and their imaginations are filling in the blanks. That's called priming.
If you want something more theoretical, 'The Search for Hidden Animals' by Sanderson is old but genuinely interesting.
Honestly mate, most paranormal documentaries are nonsense because they're made by people who've already decided what the answer is.