ID | #1638698249 |
Added | Sun, 05/12/2021 |
Author | July N. |
Sources | |
Phenomena | |
Status | Result
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Resume |
Initial data
This video was recently posted on Twitter by an employee of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife Service. The man was confused by the strange sounds of Star Wars coming from the lake.
UFOs with a white sphere have been reported and witnessed by thousands of Colorado residents over the past few years.
Scott K. Waring - Taiwan considers:
The signals indicate that there is an alien base deep under the lake, which amplifies the sounds below due to the fact that it is frozen... it acts as an amplifier.
Original news
Date of discovery: Dec 4, 2021
Location of discovery: Steamboat Springs, Colorado
Updated just now: Colorado TV New channel is now talking about it...video below.
This video was recently posted by an employee of the Colorado Parks and Wildlife service on Twitter. The person was baffled by the strange Star War sounds coming from the lake. White sphere UFOs have been recorded and eyewitnesses by thousand of residents of Colorado over the last few years. The signals point to there being an alien base deep below the lake, which amplifies the sounds below due to it being frozen...it acts like an amplifier. Alien bases are never small. Most are 3-6km deep and cover an area of about 5km and even have their own weather system...with chances of rain. This is 100% proof of an alien base below this lake in Colorado. But...if signals can travel up from the alien base, then it would also work to send signals back down to the base. A loud enough speaker placed in a dug out 1 meter deep ice hole at the center of the lake would be sufficient to send them a sonic signal. But...what would you say? In the wrong hands, it could cause an alien military response.
Scott C. Waring - Taiwan
Hypotheses
Investigation
"Singing" can be heard due to the increase in temperature. As a result, the upper layer of ice expands, and the lower one (which is in contact with the water column) stays cooler and harder. Cracks gradually appear on the surface, and thin ice on the surface of the water plays the role of a membrane. Such sounds are amplified when a stone hits the surface, skates slide, etc.
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