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IR UFOs

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posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 11:43 AM
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UFO FLEET in IR





Hi,
When the weather is nice I do a spot UFO hunting in infrared and being new to this site I thought I'd share one of my videos.

I hope you like it.

[edit on 22-11-2008 by Ufoash]

[edit on 22-11-2008 by Ufoash]



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 11:58 AM
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Look forward to watching it when the link works...

Message on youtube stated: The URL contained a malformed video ID



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:00 PM
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Is this it?




posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:05 PM
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reply to post by Chadwickus
 



Thats is!!!

Thank you!

Its all new to me this site as you can probably tell!



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:33 PM
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nice find good footage




posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:48 PM
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Impressive. I wish I had an IR camera or the new Nightvision goggles George Norry talks about



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:49 PM
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Good catch!

Did you see anything with your naked eye, or is it only visible to the IR camera?

How long did you have to wait to catch something?



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 12:56 PM
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What camera are you using, what lens, and where and when was this located?

Welcome to ATS.



posted on Nov, 22 2008 @ 01:42 PM
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This phenom is a very interesting one that may or may not be related to "structured craft". They are UFO's in the traditional sense as they cannot be readily identified. The shot is still to far out to make an accurate guess at WHAT they ARE...but here are some possibilities:


  • They are balloons, more than likely made of mylar which can obtain rather high altitudes, remain aloft for days, and be highly reflective.


  • A flock of birds, most likely geese who's undersides are white and
    posses an amazing amount of reflectivity, are warm blooded thus giving a strong IR signature.


  • They are structured craft, of terrestrial or extra terrestrial or extra dimensional origins.


  • They are a previously discovered but elusive form of Aeroplankton creatures who live and thrive in high altitude environments and are only visible in certain conditions that can be duplicated by IR vision. Some people refer to them as "CRITTERS".





    Since 1970 the Aerofauna have been classified as a separate biological kingdom. While there are superficial resemblances to terrestrial and marine animal forms, these creatures represent a completely isolated evolutionary chain. Unfortunately there is no fossil record to confirm their exact relationships; specimens are crushed or disintegrate at low altitude, their cells imploding under pressure. Genetic typing shows that they are more closely related to each other than to any other living organism; the closest similarity is found in some marine protozoans, but even there the resemblance is not great. The most distinctive feature is the presence of a blue-grey photosynthetic pigment in all cells, even in animal-like species; this pigment is most efficient in the higher UV frequencies, and has not been found in any terrestrial or aquatic species. Uniquely, a by-product of this process is hydrogen, used for buoyancy.

    Today approximately 250 species are known, ranging from microscopic aeroplankton to the mighty Aeromomedusa Leviathan of the East African aerial jungle. Nineteen species are commonly found over Britain and Europe. All are superficially similar to protozoans or invertebrates; none have developed bones, although some remarkably strong lightweight structures have taken their place. There are generally considered to be four main phyla, all named after the nearest marine or terrestrial equivalent; aeroplankton, aeromedusae, aeromesozoa, and aeromollusca.

    The larger species retain photosynthetic pigments in their cells, but cannot generate enough hydrogen to stay aloft. The aeromedusae and aeromesozoa feed on aeroplankton for extra energy and hydrogen, and are in turn prey to the aeromollusca. In ecological terms, their distribution represents a typical pyramid of biomass; roughly twenty tons of aeroplankton per ton of primary consumer (aeromedusae and aeromesozoa), and about the same proportion of primary consumers to predators (aeromollusca).


    I know it sounds incredible doesn't it... if there is one shred or possibility this could be true, I would think that it warrants investigation. Heres the info I could gather on this obscure phenomenon.





    Hopefully you can read the descriptions of these specimens as I tried to create this graphic to fit well in this venue and that requires very little bandwidth to display... it is interesting though I personally do NOT put to much stock in it. We KNOW the microscopic "Aeroplankton" exist..as far as the "large species" I think it was fabricated or made up..just some possibilities for us all to ponder.




    [edit on 22-11-2008 by Alter-Ego]



  • posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 07:51 AM
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    The lack of replies to this footage is disturbing. I see the 'birds/balloons' crown turned up once more - pity because the footage is excellent and yet a stony cold silence.

    When ATS gets IR footage, every one jumps on the band wagon to proclaim its brilliance. When ordinary 'Joe' gets some good footage, ATS is a grave yard.

    Shame on people.



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 09:13 AM
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    reply to post by YourForever
     


    Thanks, I did have a quick look while I was filming but I didn't see anything. The start of this video is pretty much when I turned on the camcorder so I was pretty lucky. Within an hour of filming I'd posted it on youtube.



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 09:22 AM
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    Oh dont you just love that music track!! (the most believable part of the entire video).


    The music track had my attention more than the video content did...I think thats what the intent was anyway...someone using video to show off their music track so it can be heard.


    I did not see any UFO or UFO fleet here, just ballons.


    Oh and IR...used in the daytime practically pointing directly at the sun..well that doesnt work because IR is so sensitive that the entire video would be oversautrated from the sunlight. Looks to me like plain ol black and white video. Even being behind the pole to prevent sunlight from getting into the shot, the video would still be so oversaturated due to the simple fact that IR is extremely sensitive.


    ("Never goin down the suckerpath baby"....Ugly Kid Joe)


    Cheers!!!



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 09:37 AM
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    reply to post by TravisT
     


    I use a sony handycam DCR-DVD106E switched over to night vision.

    On this day I was using a 950nm IR pass filter,
    a 0.45 wide angle lens,
    2.0x tele converter to double up the optical zoom make it 80x and the camera swiched to black and white.

    I also have the zoom set to infinity so it doesn't try to focus on anything to close that I don't want it to.



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 09:55 AM
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    reply to post by RFBurns
     


    Haven't you ever seen a load of helium balloons let off?
    They don't fly like this do they?

    They flop about all over the place and travel upwards.

    These are travelling along in a horizonal path almost locked in position.

    You can film in IR during the day by using a selection of filters depending on how bright the condions are.
    I also have it in switched over to B&W as things stand out alot more that way.

    Its either that or green and white.



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 10:05 AM
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    Yes you can video in IR in daylight using a variety of filters, to which the filters you are refering to are not standard equipment on that Sony camera. I know, Im a certified Sony Tech. :p

    Good idea to switch to B/W mode to avoid the green look, now are you aware that in B/W mode during night vision shooting degrades the sensitivity of the night vision mode on those consumer cameras? Yep..it does. So in effect your not only preventing the ugly green video mode, your wiping out about 30 percent of the sensitivity of the IR mode in that camera by switching to B/W mode. And by adding filters on the lens, your also decreasing the available incomming IR light waves to the CCD element, which in turn, its AGC cranks up to try to compensate, and thus, adds more noise to the end result.

    If I were you, I would find another venue to post that video which would be in a more cleaner format than YouBloobe because video on YouBloobe is highly compressed and pixilated with compression and does not make for any true analysis to be made on the claim. The objects are not detailed enough to say it is this or it is that.


    I did see the bug that flew by in the video tho...at least it caught that!




    Cheers!!!!



    posted on Nov, 23 2008 @ 10:45 AM
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    reply to post by RFBurns
     


    Arn't you a friendly welcoming character?

    I make do with with the equipment I've got because it works and I get the results that I'm after.

    If you think they are balloons that's your epinion,
    If I thought they were balloons I wouldn't have posted the footage in the first place.

    It may be grainy but there is nothing I can do about that.
    You can click onto my youtube channel and watch in 'high quality' and full screen it does make a difference.



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