Basements and top floors are classic poltergeist zones - basements because they're closest to the earth (higher paranormal conductivity) and top floors because energy rises.
The marks are the most interesting detail here. Sleep paralysis doesn't usually involve physical evidence. That pushes this more towards genuine alien contact territory.
funding has been quietly cutAny evidence of this? You can check government spending records, departmental budgets are public (sort of).
Right, first things first: film everything. Get it documented. Second: check your electrics. Dodgy wiring can cause all sorts - lights flickering, appliances behaving weirdly.
Finally some standards. Not sure why this took two years. Looking forward to the guidelines - assuming they're evidence-based rather than "must agree with our beliefs" nonsense.
Been using one of these for three months now and I've got some thoughts. For context: I'm experienced with investigation equipment, I'm not a beginner who doesn't understand baseline expectations,...
The old Underground stations are fascinating but they're also just acoustically weird. The tunnel structure and the age of the architecture means sounds carry strangely, you get echoes that seem...
The MoD's been consistent about one thing - refusing to comment on national security matters. Whether that's because they found something interesting or because there's just nothing worth...
PubScienceNerd: I work in wildlife photography and people are absolutely terrible at judging what they see through trees. Had a woman convinced she'd photographed a panther in Devon last month.
Underground stations are incredibly atmospheric regardless of paranormal activity. You're 100+ feet underground in Victorian-era tunnels with poor ventilation, constant noise, and thousands of...
UFOScotland_Neil: Fantastic report. Morar area has previous history - there have been unexplained sightings there for years. The loch itself has monster reports too (Morag).
The issue is burden of proof. Cryptozoology demands we prove things exist. Zoology demands evidence before they're officially recognized.
Bodmin's a solid choice for autonomous deployment - fewer tourists than most haunted moors. For weatherproofing, I use Pelican cases (£40-80 depending on size) with desiccant packets inside.
Fair push-back on thermal but disagree on the motion sensors. Too many false positives from wind, animals, people in adjacent rooms.
Lovely breakdown. I'm definitely the Researcher, which is probably why half the thread ignore my actually useful contributions and just want to either mock me or worship me as some kind of...