|
UFO-Like
Clouds
Linked
to
Military
Maneuvers?
Triple
"hole-punch
clouds"
appeared
close
together
off
South
Carolina
January
7. 
Ted
Chamberlain
National
Geographic
News
January
28, 2011
Three
nearly
identical,
UFO-like
cloud
formations
recently
appeared
over
Myrtle
Beach,
South
Carolina,
sparking
online
discussions
linking
the
features
to
everything
from the
Second
Coming
to
recent
mass
bird
deaths
to
secret
military
experiments.
At least
one
scientist
believes
the
so-called
hole-punch
clouds
have a
military
explanation,
though
it may
not be
quite
what
conspiracy
theorists
expect.
On
January
7, IT
technician
Wesley
Tyler
was
running
out to
his car
for a
computer
part
when he
noticed
the
saucer-like
formations.
(See
other
cloud
pictures.)
"At
first we
thought
they
were
tornado
clouds,
but the
air was
so
still—like
mausoleum
still,"
Tyler
said.
"You
just
knew it
was
unusual.
I've
lived on
the
beach
for
years
and
never
seen
anything
like
that."
Back
home, he
uploaded
pictures
of the
clouds
to
Facebook,
tagging
a
meteorologist
friend,
who
later
identified
the
phenomena
as
hole-punch
clouds,
or
punch-hole
clouds.
Hole-punch
clouds
are
miniature
snowstorms
that can
occur in
thin,
subfreezing
cloud
layers.
The lack
of fine
particles,
such as
dust, in
the
clouds
means
water
droplets
have
little
to
condense
around,
so they
don't
turn to
ice
until
the
cloud
hits
about
minus 38
degrees
Fahrenheit
(minus
36
degrees
Celsius).
"Basically,
the
water
molecules
become
sluggish
enough
at this
temperature
to form
their
own
cluster
of ice
that
produces
an ice
crystal
spontaneously,"
according
to ice
microphysicist
Andrew
Heymsfield.
When
airplanes
ascend
into
this
type of
cloud,
the
rearward
force
created
by
propellers
or by
air
forced
over
wings
causes
air to
expand.
This
expansion
can cool
a
vaguely
circular
section
of the
cloud to
the
point
where
many of
the
water
droplets
freeze
and ice
crystals
form,
according
to a
June
hole-punch
cloud
study
co-authored
by
Heymsfield
in the
Bulletin
of the
American
Meteorological
Society.
Over the
next 45
minutes
or so,
ice
crystals
grow and
spread
outward,
often
resulting
in a
tightly
contained,
roughly
half-hour
snowstorm—leaving
behind a
hole
"punched"
in the
cloud.
(Related:
pictures
of a
possible
new type
of cloud.)
Triple
Hole-Punch
Clouds
Linked
to
HAARP,
Heaven?
Tyler,
the
photographer,
was
skeptical
of the
airplane
explanation,
due to
the
sheer
number
and
close
proximity
of the
cloud
formations.
"I've
scoured
the
Internet
and have
yet to
find
more
than one
hole-punch
cloud in
a single
frame,"
he said.
Myrtle
Beach
International,
he
added,
is "not
that
busy an
airport."
And, he
said,
"I've
read
that
these
clouds
form at
20,000
feet
[6,100
meters],
and
these
clouds
looked
like
they
were
right
above
us.
"I doubt
they
were
created
by
airplanes,"
Tyler
concluded—and
he's not
alone.
After
his
pictures
were
posted
on
spaceweather.com,
the
Myrtle
Beach
(map)
resident
began
hearing
from
people
all over
the
world.
Some
suspected
a more
colorful
cause—perhaps
the
military-funded
High
Frequency
Active
Auroral
Research
Program,
or
HAARP,
which
conspiracy
theorists
have
linked
to
earthquakes,
chronic
fatigue
syndrome,
global
warming,
and
other
phenomena.
Though
remote,
the
observatory-and-antenna
facility
in
Gakona,
Alaska,
is
anything
but
secret.
Even so,
its use
of radio
waves to
"excite"
areas of
Earth's
ionosphere
has
helped
convince
some
that
HAARP
can
control
weather—and
perhaps
even
create
triple
hole-punch
clouds.
"There
is no
doubt,"
one
HAARP
theorist
wrote
of the
Myrtle
Beach
apparition
on the
Big
Wobble
message
board,
"it's an
electromagnetic
corridor
produced
by our
technology."
Another
wrote
on
Starseeds.net,
"This
could be
related
to HAARP
or some
weather
manipulation
as it
also
ties in
with the
bird
deaths."
And
on
Rapture
in the
Air, a
site
devoted
to signs
of the
Second
Coming
of
Christ,
"mike"
wrote,
"Hope
the
photos
was
taken
after 3
invisible
space
[arks]
came
down
from
heaven
which
the Lord
has sent
to
earth.
... "
While
Tyler
doesn't
necessarily
buy
these
theories,
he
thought
the
airplane
explanation
was
flawed.
"There
must be
another
explanation—natural
or
otherwise."
Military
Responsible
for Odd
Clouds?
To
Heymsfield,
the
physicist,
the
explanation
is both
natural
and
otherwise.
"To me,
it's a
slam
dunk"
that
these
are
hole-punch
clouds
that
were
created
the
usual
way—by
planes—said
Heymsfield,
of the
National
Center
for
Atmospheric
Research
in
Boulder,
Colorado.
There's
"nothing
at all"
surprising
about
the
picture,
he
added.
For one
thing,
it's the
right
type of
cloud—thin,
with no
other
layers
above
it—as
evidenced
by the
clear
skies
just
beyond,
he said.
And the
cloud
layer's
temperature
fits the
hole-punch
model:
14
degrees
Fahrenheit
(minus
10
degrees
Celsius),
according
to
National
Weather
Service
records.
As for
the
cloud
being
low in
the
sky—9,000
feet
(2,700
meters),
according
to the
weather
service—"it
doesn't
matter,"
as long
as the
cloud
layer is
cold
enough,
he said.
But why
three
together?
"The
hole
sizes
and the
structure
of the
snow
falling
out of
the
holes
suggest
that all
three
holes
were
made at
nearly
the same
time,"
he said.
"My
suspicion
is that
military
aircraft
were
flying
in
formation
or one
behind
the
other."
And in
fact,
it's
"very
common"
for
training
maneuvers
to take
place
over
Myrtle
Beach,
according
to
Robert
Sexton,
community
relations
manager
for
nearby
Shaw Air
Force
Base.
More to
the
point,
Sexton
confirmed
that
fighter
jets
from
Shaw and
from the
South
Carolina
Air
National
Guard's
169th
Fighter
Wing
were
training
off the
South
Carolina
coast on
January
7
between
9 a.m.
and 2
p.m.
"After
us, the
Marines
were in
the
airspace
from 3
to 4
p.m.
with
F-18s"
out of
the
Marine
Corps
air
station
in
Beaufort,
South
Carolina,
he
emailed.
After
having
heard
the new
evidence,
Tyler,
the
photographer,
said
he's
convinced
by the
aircraft
explanation,
though
he
initially
seemed
slightly
disappointed
by its
straightforwardness.
But
"that's
still
cool
enough,"
Tyler
decided.
"I'm a
conspiracist,
but also
a
naturalist." |