Thursday, August 23, 2018

The Hessdalen Objects: Are they intelligently controlled?




Hessdalen is a small village in Norway. What makes this village unique is its unusually frequent and widely sighted aerial phenomenon. This phenomenon appears in many forms and sometimes appears as a glowing nebulous mass moving and changing form.

There are several hypotheses for this phenomenon and some seem far fetched. Some of the hypotheses include; scandium related combustion, radon decay, misidentification, cosmic EM waves, and ionized gas.

Is this phenomenon sentient or intelligent? We know from the documentary "The Portal: The Hessdalen Lights Phenomenon" that the light phenomenon responds to a laser being shined at it. They shined a laser at one of the lights and it responded by flashing eight out of nine times. I don't know of any naturally occurring phenomenon that can respond in that way to a laser being shined at it.
According to Project Hessdalen there are three main types of phenomenon observed.
"Small, strong white or blue flashes, which could show up anywhere in the sky.

Yellow or yellow-white lights. These lights have very often been seen in the valley, just over the roofs of houses, or even down on the ground. They could be stationary for more than an hour, move slowly around in the valley, and sometimes show large accelerations and speeds. They could also be higher up in the sky. Mostly they moved on a north/south course.

Several lights together with a fixed distance between each other. Mostly they were a formation of three: two yellow or white lights with a red in front. Many people talked about "The Object", when they saw this type of light. These lights could move slowly around the tops of the mountains. The direction of "travel" was mostly on a north/south course."

Below is probably one of the best videos of the phenomenon moving through the sky. What is this thing that can respond to a laser being shined at it?



AMA: I am project manager of the "Project Hessdalen" (Hessdalen light phenomena). from r/IAmA

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