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{\an7}- This looks like a good spot. {\an7}We see the mesa, the moon's
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{\an8}gonna be giving us {\an8}some backlighting.
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THOMAS: Do you see the glow?
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-The flicker? {\an1}-Yeah, it looks like the whole
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{\an1}top of the mountain is glowing.
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Look, there it is again.
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{\an1}Whoa! That's a definite beam.
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-That's spiking. -That could be dangerous.
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My head is hurting bad.
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Let's get you the heck out of here.
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-I'm serious. {\an1}-This could be life-threatening.
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He needs to be in the car, right now on the way
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to the emergency room.
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{\an5}NARRATOR: There is a ranch in northern Utah.
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{\an1}It is considered the epicenter
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of the strangest and most {\an1}disturbing phenomena on Earth.
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Animal mutilations,
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bizarre UFO sightings,
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and unusual energies that have proven harmful
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to humans.
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{\an8}For 20 years, {\an8}the federal government tried
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to find answers and failed.
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Now a new team of dedicated scientists,
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researchers and experts
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has taken over.
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They are determined to solve the mystery
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and reveal...
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{\an8}(telephone ringing) {\an8}- What's going on, Dragon? {\an7}- Hey, Brandon. So, as you know, {\an4}we had the team out last night,
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{\an8}and we started picking up {\an8}really heavy RF signals {\an8}and things like that, {\an5}like we have previously.
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{\an5}- Yeah. {\an4}- And, all of the sudden, Tom started saying that he had a headache
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{\an4}and then reached back to the {\an4}spot on the back of his head where he previously had his serious injury
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and said that he was having pain there again.
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{\an5}- Oh, my gosh. {\an5}- So, Kaleb actually grabbed him and drove him to the emergency room
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to have more testing.
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{\an5}- This is really troubling. - All I know is that people are getting hurt,
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{\an1}and we've got to figure out {\an1}why the hell that is happening.
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{\an5}- I need to get out there {\an5}immediately. Let's pull everyone together. {\an1}- I think that's a good idea.
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- Keep me posted. Thank you. - I will. See you.
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{\an8}-JIM: Morning, guys. {\an8}-BRYANT: How are you?
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{\an1}Well, I'm sure I got a little more sleep than you guys.
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{\an5}-If you got any, you got more than us. -BRYANT: Yeah, exactly.
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-We haven't slept any. -Oh, my gosh.
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How about Thomas?
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{\an7}Where's our-our good friend {\an8}Thomas?
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{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}After what happened
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{\an8}during last night's stakeout {\an8}at the mesa,
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{\an7}all of us are a bit freaked out.
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I mean, {\an1}what we saw was strange enough,
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but then Tom Winterton started getting
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the same symptoms he'd had before
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where his scalp started separating from his skull.
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{\an8}Right near daylight,
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{\an8}Thomas started having {\an8}recurring symptoms
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{\an8}from his previous injury,
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{\an8}and we had him go
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{\an8}to the emergency room.
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BRYANT: We got
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some crazy readings on the RF scale
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and things like that.
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{\an1}And immediately, he was like,
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"Oh, man, my head hurts."
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(exhales, sniffles)
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{\an1}We got him off of the property
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as quickly as possible.
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-How bad is it? {\an1}-TRAVIS: You know, it was...
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It was just... It happened so suddenly.
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But we don't know.
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(grunts)
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TRAVIS: Let me tell you.
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What we measured tonight
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wasn't a spook.
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-It was a real thing. -Yeah.
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TRAVIS: {\an1}We all saw it. It was real.
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I completely agree.
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JIM: For some reason, uh,
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this phenomenon
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attaches like a hitchhiker to Tom.
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{\an5}-Yeah, I know. It's... -JIM: And that's one of my biggest fears,
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is this happening to, {\an1}collectively, any one of you.
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{\an5}BRYANT: This is the second injury of this type
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that Tom has suffered,
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and I don't know if he's {\an1}gonna be able to come back.
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{\an5}SEGALA: So, let's do this. Let's go get some rest
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and then come back to this {\an1}and-and figure out next steps.
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{\an5}-TRAVIS: I think that's a good plan. -JIM: Yep.
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-Yeah, I'm wiped out. -I don't even know
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-what my name is anymore. -Yes.
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{\an1}-And keep me posted on-on Tom. -Thanks so much.
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-Right? All right. {\an1}-BRYANT: Oh, yeah, absolutely.
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-Thanks so much. -TRAVIS: Yeah, man.
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{\an8}-SEGALA: That's good. {\an8}-TRAVIS: Yeah.
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{\an8}-All right. All right. {\an8}Yep. Yep, good. {\an8}-(horn honking)
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What's Kaleb doing?
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(grunts)
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(chuckles): Hey!
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-You're up and about. -BRYANT: Tom!
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Hey, guys.
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Well, it's good to see you
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in an upright position, my friend.
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THOMAS: I'm fine.
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Welcome back, buddy.
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-How you feeling, man? -I'm good.
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{\an1}Good. I'm glad to see that, man.
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{\an8}THOMAS: {\an8}It was good to come back
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{\an8}and see the guys.
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{\an7}You know, when-when I drove up
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{\an7}and the guys are standing there,
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{\an8}um, their concern {\an8}was definitely humbling
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{\an8}and appreciated.
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{\an1}-Hey. Good to see you, brother. -JIM: Good to see you.
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-Appreciate you. -It is really good
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to see you, uh, up and about, man.
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{\an1}What'd they say at the hospital?
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{\an1}They took me in for a CT scan, {\an1}and it didn't pick up much.
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Well, what about... {\an1}How long did the pain last?
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More than the pain was where it was located.
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And the thing {\an1}that really caused me alarm
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was that that exact spot
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{\an1}where that lump first appeared on my first injury...
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{\an5}-Right. -THOMAS: That's where the pain started,
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{\an1}and it started throbbing there.
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Well, and it swelled up a little bit.
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{\an1}When we first brought you in, {\an1}you could feel that there was
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{\an1}-a little bit of it raised up. -Yeah.
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And the doctor could even feel...
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{\an1}You know, when he was looking at it and examining me,
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he could feel a difference there.
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He said, "Yeah, there is {\an1}a little bit of swelling there."
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{\an8}Even when they
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{\an8}took the first scans {\an8}in my previous injury,
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{\an8}they didn't notice anything {\an8}right off the bat.
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{\an8}It wasn't until {\an8}they started looking closer
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{\an8}that they started to see {\an8}similar characteristics.
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{\an8}SEGALA: {\an8}The injuries
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{\an8}that Tom Winterton {\an8}experienced two years ago
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{\an7}were of the nature that he had {\an8}a neurological episode,
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{\an8}and he had a big swelling {\an8}in the back of his head.
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He was admitted to the hospital,
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and the attending physicians really were not able
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to determine what was wrong with him.
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{\an1}I was called in as a consultant
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to try to figure out what happened,
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{\an1}and one of the things that-that {\an1}struck me about Thomas's case...
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His injuries were consistent with a radiation beam
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that entered his body from a specific angle,
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angle of attack, back behind his head.
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We got a lot to do.
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Let's get back to it, man.
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{\an5}THOMAS: All right. Let's get back to work.
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{\an5}TRAVIS: It was certainly a relief to see Tom up and about
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and learn that he wasn't suffering
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any long-term effects,
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but we're still pretty spooked out
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by what caused his injury in the first place.
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- Welcome, sir. - Good to see you.
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{\an5}I've got the team {\an5}assembled inside. {\an1}-Very good. I have the devices. -Okay.
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Let's head on in.
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BRANDON: Hey, guys.
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{\an5}-How are you? So good to see you. Tom. -(chuckles)
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{\an1}-THOMAS: Hey, good to see you. -Oh, my friend.
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It's so good to see you.
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-Oh, well... {\an1}-I've been so worried about you.
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{\an5}BRYANT: There's a seat right here for you, man.
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Great. {\an1}Well, it's good to be with you.
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And as soon as I heard the report
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of Tom being run to the hospital,
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{\an1}I've been very, very concerned.
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Yeah.
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{\an1}It's one thing to see lights on the mesa.
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It's another thing to see {\an1}the TriField meters going off.
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{\an1}But it's a whole other situation
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{\an1}when one of our team members {\an1}ends up going to the hospital.
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{\an5}-Right. -BRANDON: Given all the incidents
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{\an1}that have occurred recently and Tom's injuries
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{\an1}and so many strange anomalies,
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should we go ahead {\an1}with the investigation further?
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Or is this really a point
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where we need to take a deep breath
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and maybe a step back?
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What-What's your thoughts on that, Tom?
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I appreciate {\an1}all of the concern and love
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{\an1}that's been shown towards me.
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{\an1}This is like the ranch family, as we call it.
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If this is about us,
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we quit.
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{\an1}But this shouldn't be about us.
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I think we're seeing that the ranch
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could potentially be a very dangerous place.
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But to me, the question is is it the Uinta Basin
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that could be {\an1}a potentially dangerous place?
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What are my neighbors {\an1}and my friends being exposed to?
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Now, whatever's happening on this ranch
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I highly doubt is confined
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to the barbwire fence of the 512 acres.
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{\an1}Okay? There are good people that live in this valley.
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{\an1}These people are my people.
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{\an1}-So, you feel a responsibility? -THOMAS: If we're truly
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seeking for answers,
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then I think the answer is we stay
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because I want to know if there's
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something here {\an1}that's affecting not just us
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but the good people {\an1}that live around in this valley.
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{\an1}My injury really made this quest
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for this science discovery personal.
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There's something dangerous.
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{\an1}We need to identify what it is.
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We can't cut and run.
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It'd be irresponsible.
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Well, Thomas, if that's how you feel,
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Erik and I have taken immediate steps
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{\an1}regarding how we move forward.
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{\an8}BRANDON: {\an8}Lights on the mesa.
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{\an8}Tom's injuries.
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{\an8}-These things are real. {\an8}-Right.
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{\an7}BRANDON: Now, it's one thing {\an8}to see the TriField meters
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{\an8}going off, {\an7}but it's a whole other situation
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{\an7}when one of our team members {\an7}ends up going to the hospital.
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{\an8}Well, with that urgency,
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{\an8}I've recently reached out {\an8}with Erik to a company
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{\an8}called Biobeat.
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They have armed us
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with some devices {\an1}that I wanted to fly out today.
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These are wearable sensor devices.
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{\an1}Medical-grade. Will give us {\an1}the ability to better monitor
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the health and safety of our team.
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{\an8}ERIK: {\an8}What we have here are
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{\an7}basic vital sign measurements {\an8}like our body temperature,
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{\an7}our heart rate and perspira... {\an7}our perspiration, respiration.
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{\an8}But we also have {\an8}the stress indicators
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{\an8}that tell us if we are {\an8}under some kind of stress.
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{\an4}If something's happening with {\an1}us, we will immediately be able to see that right in here.
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So, the idea is, yes, we're keeping people safe.
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{\an1}But yes, we are also serving as, as bio sensors.
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{\an5}JIM: So now we have these watches that we're all gonna wear.
235
00:10:51,166 --> 00:10:53,458
{\an1}We're gonna be monitored 24/7.
236
00:10:53,500 --> 00:10:58,291
{\an8}If something does happen, {\an8}then we're alerted {\an8}and brought off {\an5}the ranch immediately.
237
00:10:58,333 --> 00:11:00,208
{\an7}So, actually, if we had that {\an8}that night,
238
00:11:00,250 --> 00:11:02,709
{\an7}and it was set up to alarm, {\an8}we might have known this
239
00:11:02,750 --> 00:11:05,417
{\an7}before even Thomas knew this.
240
00:11:05,458 --> 00:11:07,166
Well, gentlemen, I need to get back.
241
00:11:07,208 --> 00:11:09,792
Please know {\an1}that I am available real time,
242
00:11:09,834 --> 00:11:11,667
and let me know
243
00:11:11,709 --> 00:11:14,834
{\an5}how things progress. {\an5}-JIM: Thank you. -Appreciate you. -Good to see you.
244
00:11:14,875 --> 00:11:15,875
-Thank you so much. -Yeah.
245
00:11:15,917 --> 00:11:17,917
♪
246
00:11:17,959 --> 00:11:21,333
{\an5}We'll continue to keep you {\an1}monitored on everything. We'll be in touch soon.
247
00:11:21,375 --> 00:11:24,500
- Okay. - All right. Take care.
248
00:11:39,375 --> 00:11:41,166
{\an8}Hey. There they are.
249
00:11:41,208 --> 00:11:43,542
{\an5}TRAVIS: After the other night, we all agreed
250
00:11:43,583 --> 00:11:45,875
that we should continue {\an1}our noninvasive search efforts
251
00:11:45,917 --> 00:11:48,291
{\an1}to see if the strange radiation spikes we've been getting
252
00:11:48,333 --> 00:11:49,792
are coming from underground.
253
00:11:49,834 --> 00:11:51,208
{\an1}But what concerns me is that,
254
00:11:51,250 --> 00:11:53,208
even though he hadn't been digging,
255
00:11:53,250 --> 00:11:55,250
Thomas still got sick near the mesa.
256
00:11:55,291 --> 00:11:57,041
So far, it just doesn't add up.
257
00:11:57,083 --> 00:11:58,458
Hey, guys.
258
00:11:58,500 --> 00:12:00,291
-Morning, Erik. {\an1}-Like to introduce you guys
259
00:12:00,333 --> 00:12:03,125
to Derrick. He's from Hot Shots
260
00:12:03,166 --> 00:12:04,625
-out of L.A. -Derrick and Erik.
261
00:12:04,667 --> 00:12:06,709
{\an1}-Okay, I can remember that. {\an1}-How are you? Travis Taylor.
262
00:12:06,750 --> 00:12:09,000
{\an4}-Derrick Ward. Nice to meet you. -Nice to meet you, man. {\an1}So, I've brought Derrick out
263
00:12:09,041 --> 00:12:11,834
{\an7}to do a thermographic imaging {\an8}of the entire property.
264
00:12:11,875 --> 00:12:14,625
{\an8}He's a drone expert, {\an8}and I think he can show us
265
00:12:14,667 --> 00:12:16,750
{\an8}some things {\an8}that may be just beneath
266
00:12:16,792 --> 00:12:18,709
{\an7}the surface of the soil here.
267
00:12:18,750 --> 00:12:22,709
The results of {\an1}Robert Bigelow's investigation
268
00:12:22,750 --> 00:12:24,959
{\an1}have never been fully release.
269
00:12:25,000 --> 00:12:28,208
There are rumors about some kind of base
270
00:12:28,250 --> 00:12:30,625
or perhaps an alien artifact
271
00:12:30,667 --> 00:12:32,542
beneath the property
272
00:12:32,583 --> 00:12:34,750
using drone thermography.
273
00:12:34,792 --> 00:12:37,000
Perhaps there is, in fact, something under the ground
274
00:12:37,041 --> 00:12:39,458
that will show up in our imagery.
275
00:12:39,500 --> 00:12:41,083
{\an1}Really looking forward to seeing
276
00:12:41,125 --> 00:12:42,917
what comes out of our work today.
277
00:12:42,959 --> 00:12:45,250
Yeah. Yeah, we got some of the best technology
278
00:12:45,291 --> 00:12:46,750
out there right now.
279
00:12:46,792 --> 00:12:48,625
{\an1}Drone itself is about $35,000.
280
00:12:48,667 --> 00:12:50,959
In every image {\an1}and every pixel of that image,
281
00:12:51,000 --> 00:12:52,417
you're able {\an1}to capture the temperatures.
282
00:12:52,458 --> 00:12:54,041
-Wow. {\an1}-It's-it's crazy technology.
283
00:12:54,083 --> 00:12:56,458
{\an5}ERIK: So, for example, {\an1}if-if there were something,
284
00:12:56,500 --> 00:12:58,208
say a stone structure,
285
00:12:58,250 --> 00:13:00,375
{\an1}beneath the surface of the soil,
286
00:13:00,417 --> 00:13:02,625
uh, let's say {\an1}maybe two, three feet down...
287
00:13:02,667 --> 00:13:04,625
If it's right below and it's actually hotter
288
00:13:04,667 --> 00:13:06,000
than everything else, it's creating a signature,
289
00:13:06,041 --> 00:13:08,792
{\an5}-then we will find that and see that. -Right.
290
00:13:08,834 --> 00:13:10,750
That's cool stuff, man. {\an1}I'm excited to see what you got.
291
00:13:10,792 --> 00:13:12,417
-So, let's get going. -Yeah.
292
00:13:12,458 --> 00:13:14,917
TRAVIS: {\an1}Because any large metal objects
293
00:13:14,959 --> 00:13:17,291
or structures located underground
294
00:13:17,333 --> 00:13:19,458
are likely to have a higher temperature,
295
00:13:19,500 --> 00:13:21,208
{\an1}it should appear on Derrick's camera as a darker color.
296
00:13:21,250 --> 00:13:23,709
So if we see anything
297
00:13:23,750 --> 00:13:26,041
out of the ordinary, {\an1}we can pinpoint it as a place
298
00:13:26,083 --> 00:13:28,333
{\an1}where we can come back later and maybe dig.
299
00:13:30,041 --> 00:13:31,875
DERRICK: Okay, all clear.
300
00:13:41,542 --> 00:13:43,166
Those things are so cool.
301
00:13:43,208 --> 00:13:46,041
{\an5}DERRICK: Now watch carefully what happens.
302
00:13:46,083 --> 00:13:48,166
Give you guys an example of the capability here.
303
00:13:48,208 --> 00:13:49,917
{\an1}So we got a thermal camera.
304
00:13:49,959 --> 00:13:51,750
If we see something {\an1}and we're not sure what it is
305
00:13:51,792 --> 00:13:53,166
in the thermal image,
306
00:13:53,208 --> 00:13:55,792
{\an1}we can immediately switch over to the regular image,
307
00:13:55,834 --> 00:13:57,583
get a closer look.
308
00:13:57,625 --> 00:14:00,250
Watch the zoom here when I do this.
309
00:14:00,291 --> 00:14:01,917
BRYANT: That's amazing.
310
00:14:01,959 --> 00:14:04,041
JIM: You can get on a leaf.
311
00:14:04,083 --> 00:14:07,125
{\an5}-So, if there was {\an4}a mountain lion up in there, you'd probably see that. -Oh, yeah.
312
00:14:07,166 --> 00:14:09,125
JIM: So, right in here,
313
00:14:09,166 --> 00:14:11,000
{\an1}there's a whole bunch of caves
314
00:14:11,041 --> 00:14:12,959
we get a lot of radiation out of.
315
00:14:13,000 --> 00:14:14,959
We got some black stuff right there.
316
00:14:15,000 --> 00:14:16,709
See all inside of there?
317
00:14:16,750 --> 00:14:18,709
{\an5}TRAVIS: Is that a shadow or is that a cool spot?
318
00:14:18,750 --> 00:14:20,291
DERRICK: Well, let's find out.
319
00:14:20,333 --> 00:14:22,125
{\an5}ERIK: I think you're looking at shadows.
320
00:14:22,166 --> 00:14:24,125
DERRICK: Yeah, that's all shadows.
321
00:14:24,166 --> 00:14:26,208
BRYANT: So, Erik, what are you
322
00:14:26,250 --> 00:14:29,125
mostly curious about checking out
323
00:14:29,166 --> 00:14:31,625
{\an5}-with all this thermal i-imagery? -What I'd like to do
324
00:14:31,667 --> 00:14:34,166
{\an1}is I'd like to put that drone {\an1}as high in the sky as I can
325
00:14:34,208 --> 00:14:37,333
and look straight down and fly over the field.
326
00:14:37,375 --> 00:14:38,917
We'll go up and get that for you.
327
00:14:40,250 --> 00:14:42,208
ERIK: Let's suppose we have
328
00:14:42,250 --> 00:14:45,166
some really big structure under the property,
329
00:14:45,208 --> 00:14:48,333
like circular things, something rectangular.
330
00:14:48,375 --> 00:14:50,834
If we see shapes like that in the thermal profile,
331
00:14:50,875 --> 00:14:54,500
then that may be a hint {\an1}as to where something unusual
332
00:14:54,542 --> 00:14:56,709
{\an1}is located under the ground.
333
00:14:56,750 --> 00:14:58,917
So, what would account for this...
334
00:14:58,959 --> 00:15:02,166
this boundary here, {\an1}between this area and this area?
335
00:15:02,208 --> 00:15:04,000
{\an5}DERRICK: Just the way things are hitting the sun.
336
00:15:04,041 --> 00:15:06,792
{\an1}The vegetation of it is longer {\an1}in one area than the other,
337
00:15:06,834 --> 00:15:08,750
then it's creating shade somewhere.
338
00:15:08,792 --> 00:15:10,959
{\an1}I like the striations there. That's interesting.
339
00:15:11,000 --> 00:15:12,750
JIM: That's the bait pen.
340
00:15:12,792 --> 00:15:15,458
-DERRICK: What's that? {\an1}-BRYANT: The previous ownership
341
00:15:15,500 --> 00:15:18,583
put cattle or dogs or whatever in that area
342
00:15:18,625 --> 00:15:21,458
as an early warning or detection system.
343
00:15:21,500 --> 00:15:23,625
-TRAVIS: It wasn't us. -Yeah. Not at all.
344
00:15:27,291 --> 00:15:29,834
{\an5}BRANDON: Immediately upon Robert Bigelow's occupation
345
00:15:29,875 --> 00:15:31,625
of the property and bringing the...
346
00:15:31,667 --> 00:15:34,041
scientific team on Skinwalker Ranch,
347
00:15:34,083 --> 00:15:37,291
they installed observation towers
348
00:15:37,333 --> 00:15:40,709
with razor wire and enclosures around them.
349
00:15:40,750 --> 00:15:43,875
With the constant daylight cattle mutilations
350
00:15:43,917 --> 00:15:45,875
that were occurring on the property,
351
00:15:45,917 --> 00:15:49,375
{\an1}the idea was to actually place livestock
352
00:15:49,417 --> 00:15:50,834
-in these enclosures ■ -(mooing)
353
00:15:50,875 --> 00:15:54,542
{\an1}to see the phenomena at work.
354
00:15:56,041 --> 00:15:59,083
That study and a lot of the findings
355
00:15:59,125 --> 00:16:00,834
{\an1}that came out of those years,
356
00:16:00,875 --> 00:16:03,250
you know, remain under lock and key.
357
00:16:03,291 --> 00:16:05,667
ERIK: {\an1}So far in what you've seen,
358
00:16:05,709 --> 00:16:06,917
{\an1}have you seen any hard edges,
359
00:16:06,959 --> 00:16:08,959
corners, anything?
360
00:16:09,000 --> 00:16:12,166
{\an1}No. I haven't seen anything {\an1}that-that just seems abnormal.
361
00:16:12,208 --> 00:16:15,375
{\an5}TRAVIS: Even though everything from UFO sightings
362
00:16:15,417 --> 00:16:17,041
to cattle mutilations have happened
363
00:16:17,083 --> 00:16:18,709
on this part of the ranch,
364
00:16:18,750 --> 00:16:21,333
{\an1}we didn't see anything unusual underground.
365
00:16:21,375 --> 00:16:23,333
Yeah, well, this is all data
366
00:16:23,375 --> 00:16:25,542
-that we've got. -ERIK: Yeah.
367
00:16:25,583 --> 00:16:27,417
{\an4}I think we can bring it in, {\an5}and-and let's head on to the western end of the property.
368
00:16:27,458 --> 00:16:29,166
-(beep) -All right. That works.
369
00:16:32,291 --> 00:16:34,834
{\an5}TRAVIS: We decided to head over to {\an1}what's known as Homestead Two.
370
00:16:34,875 --> 00:16:36,667
It's right by the area of the mesa
371
00:16:36,709 --> 00:16:39,083
where we've been getting all these radiation spikes.
372
00:16:39,125 --> 00:16:41,333
It's also where there's been a concentration
373
00:16:41,375 --> 00:16:43,250
of strange phenomena, like glowing lights
374
00:16:43,291 --> 00:16:46,291
{\an1}at night and even some reported paranormal activity.
375
00:16:47,375 --> 00:16:50,083
{\an1}Homestead Two was built in 195
376
00:16:50,125 --> 00:16:51,500
by John and Emma Meyers,
377
00:16:51,542 --> 00:16:53,250
who lived there and raised cattle.
378
00:16:53,291 --> 00:16:56,750
It's been abandoned since the 1930s,
379
00:16:56,792 --> 00:17:00,166
{\an1}and a lot of the locals think it's haunted.
380
00:17:01,583 --> 00:17:03,375
ERIK: As we go out just around
381
00:17:03,417 --> 00:17:05,875
-the point of the mesa here. -DERRICK: Okay.
382
00:17:05,917 --> 00:17:08,542
{\an5}BRYANT: It seems to be that a lot of the activity
383
00:17:08,583 --> 00:17:12,125
{\an1}or strangeness that we encounter is centered
384
00:17:12,166 --> 00:17:13,750
around those homesteads.
385
00:17:13,792 --> 00:17:15,583
{\an5}THOMAS: {\an1}You can see the old homestead right there.
386
00:17:15,625 --> 00:17:17,333
{\an8}-DERRICK: Yeah. {\an8}-BRYANT: We have things
387
00:17:17,375 --> 00:17:20,083
{\an8}from batteries on equipment {\an8}going from 100%
388
00:17:20,125 --> 00:17:22,500
{\an7}to zero in a matter of second,
389
00:17:22,542 --> 00:17:25,250
{\an8}people feeling vertigo {\an8}or not being able
390
00:17:25,291 --> 00:17:26,750
{\an8}to hear sound.
391
00:17:26,792 --> 00:17:30,208
DERRICK: All set. Ready to go.
392
00:17:30,250 --> 00:17:33,041
{\an1}Well, so, our hot spots right {\an1}here are on top of the mesa.
393
00:17:33,083 --> 00:17:34,458
And-and right over
394
00:17:34,500 --> 00:17:37,375
in this area is a cave that we've been observing.
395
00:17:37,417 --> 00:17:38,917
{\an1}And then these houses here--
396
00:17:38,959 --> 00:17:40,917
we want to make sure we get good views of them.
397
00:17:40,959 --> 00:17:43,166
-Right? -DERRICK: Okay. All right.
398
00:17:43,208 --> 00:17:45,125
Let's do this. I'll fire it up.
399
00:17:45,166 --> 00:17:47,792
(drone beeps on)
400
00:17:49,917 --> 00:17:51,875
(beeps)
401
00:17:55,792 --> 00:17:58,208
No connection.
402
00:17:59,250 --> 00:18:00,458
TRAVIS: Huh.
403
00:18:00,500 --> 00:18:01,667
That's weird.
404
00:18:01,709 --> 00:18:02,959
That... It makes no sense.
405
00:18:03,000 --> 00:18:04,000
-(beeping) {\an1}-DERRICK: We're not connected.
406
00:18:04,041 --> 00:18:05,625
I'm not connecting to the remote.
407
00:18:05,667 --> 00:18:07,625
I don't know what's happening with it.
408
00:18:07,667 --> 00:18:10,500
{\an1}Well, there's a reason why we {\an1}wanted him to check this area,
409
00:18:10,542 --> 00:18:11,834
{\an1}because of stuff like this.
410
00:18:20,000 --> 00:18:23,166
{\an8}(drone beeping)
411
00:18:23,208 --> 00:18:24,458
{\an7}DERRICK: I'm not connecting {\an8}to the remote.
412
00:18:24,500 --> 00:18:25,750
{\an8}I don't know
413
00:18:25,792 --> 00:18:28,375
{\an8}-what's happening with it. {\an8}-It makes no sense.
414
00:18:28,417 --> 00:18:29,959
{\an5}BRYANT: There's a reason why we wanted him to check
415
00:18:30,000 --> 00:18:32,333
this area, {\an1}because of stuff like this.
416
00:18:32,375 --> 00:18:34,250
{\an8}(beeping continues)
417
00:18:34,291 --> 00:18:36,250
{\an8}BRYANT: Near the old {\an8}Homestead Number Two
418
00:18:36,291 --> 00:18:38,667
{\an8}is an area {\an7}where we're always having issues
419
00:18:38,709 --> 00:18:42,000
{\an8}with electronic equipment {\an8}and malfunctions.
420
00:18:42,041 --> 00:18:44,500
When we went to the sinkhole that we have up
421
00:18:44,542 --> 00:18:47,709
above Homestead Two, {\an1}another similar thing happened.
422
00:18:47,750 --> 00:18:49,542
I will tell you, {\an1}my phone battery just went...
423
00:18:49,583 --> 00:18:51,792
{\an5}-(sputters) -Your battery's dead on your phone?
424
00:18:51,834 --> 00:18:53,750
{\an5}-Huh. -TRAVIS: Yeah. Your battery's dead, too,
425
00:18:53,792 --> 00:18:55,875
-ain't it? -It shut off.
426
00:18:55,917 --> 00:18:57,709
{\an5}TRAVIS: If there's one place on the property
427
00:18:57,750 --> 00:19:00,125
where cell phones and {\an1}electronic equipment won't work
428
00:19:00,166 --> 00:19:01,875
or meter readings will go haywire,
429
00:19:01,917 --> 00:19:03,542
it's here.
430
00:19:03,583 --> 00:19:06,500
{\an8}The real problem is {\an8}we can't figure out why.
431
00:19:06,542 --> 00:19:09,875
{\an1}Do you think it's interference from something or...
432
00:19:09,917 --> 00:19:11,875
{\an1}Well, it is, but what's cau...
433
00:19:11,917 --> 00:19:15,041
{\an1}I mean, I could walk five feet and see if it changes.
434
00:19:15,083 --> 00:19:17,875
{\an5}-So let me do that first and see what happens. -Okay.
435
00:19:21,959 --> 00:19:24,417
Is it connecting to you over there, Derrick?
436
00:19:24,458 --> 00:19:26,417
-No. -Huh.
437
00:19:26,458 --> 00:19:29,041
{\an1}Yeah, we've seen batteries act {\an1}squirrelly around here anyway.
438
00:19:29,083 --> 00:19:32,709
{\an7}And it zapped the battery of my {\an7}phone, like, almost instantly.
439
00:19:32,750 --> 00:19:34,208
{\an7}It could be something weird
440
00:19:34,250 --> 00:19:36,417
{\an8}about {\an7}this-this little area here.
441
00:19:38,041 --> 00:19:39,583
ERIK: I do have
442
00:19:39,625 --> 00:19:41,959
{\an1}some prominent signal here.
443
00:19:42,000 --> 00:19:43,709
{\an4}-TRAVIS: At what frequency? Do you know? -Well, 5480.
444
00:19:43,750 --> 00:19:45,125
TRAVIS: So, at five gigahertz.
445
00:19:47,542 --> 00:19:49,917
5.2.
446
00:19:49,959 --> 00:19:53,834
So, we're getting a five gigahertz signal.
447
00:19:53,875 --> 00:19:55,166
That's weird.
448
00:19:55,208 --> 00:19:57,250
That's not just weird. It's concerning.
449
00:19:57,291 --> 00:19:59,917
{\an5}BRYANT: There have been times when I've been out
450
00:19:59,959 --> 00:20:01,000
by the old homestead
451
00:20:01,041 --> 00:20:03,709
and got a really creepy feeling.
452
00:20:03,750 --> 00:20:05,333
So, whatever it is, you know,
453
00:20:05,375 --> 00:20:06,542
{\an1}I'll leave it to the scientists
454
00:20:06,583 --> 00:20:08,250
to try and decipher it. All I know
455
00:20:08,291 --> 00:20:11,000
is that something strange happened that caused
456
00:20:11,041 --> 00:20:14,000
so much interference that a $35,000 drone
457
00:20:14,041 --> 00:20:15,542
{\an1}couldn't get up in the air.
458
00:20:15,583 --> 00:20:17,959
You know, {\an1}we may be done here for the day,
459
00:20:18,000 --> 00:20:20,834
{\an5}because, uh... {\an5}because of this. {\an1}And we certainly don't want to put your drone at risk.
460
00:20:20,875 --> 00:20:22,542
-Yeah. -Let's call this a wrap.
461
00:20:24,917 --> 00:20:26,583
Derrick, man, appreciate you coming out.
462
00:20:26,625 --> 00:20:29,166
{\an5}-We really appreciate you coming out. -More than happy to do it.
463
00:20:29,208 --> 00:20:31,041
-Thank you. Thank you. {\an1}-Hey, we'll figure this out.
464
00:20:40,125 --> 00:20:42,083
{\an8}TRAVIS: There is {\an8}electromagnetic radiation.
465
00:20:42,125 --> 00:20:45,500
{\an8}That spike {\an8}all around the ranch.
466
00:20:45,542 --> 00:20:49,667
{\an7}You know what, we should get {\an8}those TriField meters... {\an8}-Yep. {\an5}-...out here.
467
00:20:49,709 --> 00:20:51,250
So, after the drone stopped working,
468
00:20:51,291 --> 00:20:53,583
I figured out a way {\an1}that we could modify our meters
469
00:20:53,625 --> 00:20:55,583
so that they could help us pinpoint the source
470
00:20:55,625 --> 00:20:56,959
of this interference.
471
00:20:57,000 --> 00:20:59,542
{\an7}So, real quick, I'll show y'all {\an8}what we're gonna do.
472
00:20:59,583 --> 00:21:02,125
{\an8}Right now, I'm not sure, {\an7}when we're holding these meters
473
00:21:02,166 --> 00:21:04,041
any particular way,
474
00:21:04,083 --> 00:21:06,917
which direction the signal's coming from.
475
00:21:06,959 --> 00:21:09,041
That's what these are for.
476
00:21:09,083 --> 00:21:11,917
We put this in the can, turn it on.
477
00:21:11,959 --> 00:21:15,333
{\an5}-SEGALA: Right. -That's gonna allow us {\an1}to do directional measurements,
478
00:21:15,375 --> 00:21:16,583
and that'll tell us which direction
479
00:21:16,625 --> 00:21:18,417
{\an1}the-the signal's coming from.
480
00:21:21,583 --> 00:21:23,750
{\an8}SEGALA: {\an8}Oh, my God, that's huge.
481
00:21:23,792 --> 00:21:25,834
-That's at 900. -900.
482
00:21:25,875 --> 00:21:28,000
{\an5}-There's a blip there. {\an1}-There is a huge peak right now, 900 megahertz.
483
00:21:28,041 --> 00:21:30,792
It is totally pegged out right now.
484
00:21:30,834 --> 00:21:34,041
As I turn it away, and as I turn it that way,
485
00:21:34,083 --> 00:21:35,417
it picks back up.
486
00:21:35,458 --> 00:21:37,000
This is strange.
487
00:21:37,041 --> 00:21:39,959
{\an1}Because the coffee cans block {\an1}out any extraneous RF signals,
488
00:21:40,000 --> 00:21:42,375
{\an1}it seems that the radiation might be coming
489
00:21:42,417 --> 00:21:45,583
{\an1}from above the ground and not {\an1}below, like we all suspected.
490
00:21:45,625 --> 00:21:47,583
Now, to prove it, we need to get measurements
491
00:21:47,625 --> 00:21:49,583
from three random locations on the ranch.
492
00:21:49,625 --> 00:21:51,583
By pointing our meters in the direction
493
00:21:51,625 --> 00:21:53,333
toward where we get the strongest reading
494
00:21:53,375 --> 00:21:54,458
{\an1}and see where they intersect,
495
00:21:54,500 --> 00:21:56,375
{\an1}we can then use triangulation
496
00:21:56,417 --> 00:21:59,208
to pinpoint exactly where {\an1}this radiation's coming from.
497
00:21:59,250 --> 00:22:02,041
{\an8}Okay, so here's {\an8}what we need to do, guys.
498
00:22:02,083 --> 00:22:04,333
While we know there's a signal there,
499
00:22:04,375 --> 00:22:06,291
let's run some distance from here,
500
00:22:06,333 --> 00:22:08,375
{\an1}like maybe over to the corner of the helipad area.
501
00:22:10,667 --> 00:22:13,083
We are pegged out, pointed in this direction.
502
00:22:13,125 --> 00:22:14,834
Where's my phone?
503
00:22:14,875 --> 00:22:16,959
Let's get a reading from both phones, right?
504
00:22:17,000 --> 00:22:18,959
-THOMAS: Yep. -Then we can draw a line
505
00:22:19,000 --> 00:22:20,208
from here...
506
00:22:20,250 --> 00:22:22,083
straight that way, straight in the direction,
507
00:22:22,125 --> 00:22:24,166
and then from over there draw a line,
508
00:22:24,208 --> 00:22:26,208
{\an1}and wherever those lines cross, that should be
509
00:22:26,250 --> 00:22:28,000
{\an1}where the signal's coming from.
510
00:22:28,041 --> 00:22:30,125
-Here, let me hold that. -See, when I go like this,
511
00:22:30,166 --> 00:22:31,375
{\an1}I'm picking up horizontal stuff.
512
00:22:31,417 --> 00:22:33,125
I go like this, I'm picking up vertical.
513
00:22:33,166 --> 00:22:36,125
{\an1}So I get my biggest readings {\an1}when I'm like this, looking up.
514
00:22:36,166 --> 00:22:38,208
Yeah, it's straight. It's coming straight up,.
515
00:22:38,250 --> 00:22:39,875
THOMAS: This is perfectly plum.
516
00:22:39,917 --> 00:22:41,542
It's coming from up there.
517
00:22:44,166 --> 00:22:46,333
Look-it, it's going nuts.
518
00:22:46,375 --> 00:22:48,667
{\an1}Look at that jumping like crazy.
519
00:22:48,709 --> 00:22:51,291
All right, right now {\an1}we need to get in a vehicle
520
00:22:51,333 --> 00:22:53,208
and drive...
521
00:22:53,250 --> 00:22:55,208
{\an1}to the far corners of the ranch and make this measurement
522
00:22:55,250 --> 00:22:56,875
and mark where we were when we made it.
523
00:22:56,917 --> 00:22:58,917
{\an1}So then we can map it on a map.
524
00:22:58,959 --> 00:23:00,959
♪
525
00:23:02,166 --> 00:23:04,083
So we just need to find
526
00:23:04,125 --> 00:23:06,250
a spot that we can use as a marker.
527
00:23:06,291 --> 00:23:08,625
What about right there?
528
00:23:08,667 --> 00:23:10,917
{\an1}This flower will be our spot.
529
00:23:12,542 --> 00:23:14,125
All right.
530
00:23:16,166 --> 00:23:18,125
{\an1}It's pegging out, right now.
531
00:23:18,166 --> 00:23:20,250
{\an1}-Is it pegging out on yours? -Pegged.
532
00:23:20,291 --> 00:23:21,959
{\an5}TRAVIS: What's the pitch angle of these right now?
533
00:23:22,000 --> 00:23:24,041
{\an1}-THOMAS: We're right around 38. -SEGALA: Close to 40.
534
00:23:24,083 --> 00:23:26,458
TRAVIS: Well, I think {\an1}we got what we need from here.
535
00:23:26,500 --> 00:23:30,291
So we need to go either as far east or as far west
536
00:23:30,333 --> 00:23:31,959
and get one more point.
537
00:23:32,000 --> 00:23:33,792
Here you go.
538
00:23:33,834 --> 00:23:36,041
We've got to find a point down here
539
00:23:36,083 --> 00:23:37,792
{\an1}and make the same measurements that we made up there.
540
00:23:40,625 --> 00:23:43,792
{\an8}♪
541
00:23:43,834 --> 00:23:45,500
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}All right, so,
542
00:23:45,542 --> 00:23:47,417
{\an8}what we got to do is get {\an8}some reference points
543
00:23:47,458 --> 00:23:49,208
{\an7}where we took the measurements.
544
00:23:49,250 --> 00:23:51,125
Now that Jim and Tom and I
545
00:23:51,166 --> 00:23:53,166
{\an1}have recorded three different points across the ranch
546
00:23:53,208 --> 00:23:55,333
where these radiation spikes keep occurring,
547
00:23:55,375 --> 00:23:57,291
{\an1}we're gonna go plot them out on a map
548
00:23:57,333 --> 00:23:58,875
and see exactly where they intercept.
549
00:23:58,917 --> 00:24:02,458
{\an1}Right here is the spot. Right?
550
00:24:02,500 --> 00:24:04,417
{\an5}THOMAS: We had right next {\an1}to the helipad right there.
551
00:24:04,458 --> 00:24:06,083
TRAVIS: Right there. Okay.
552
00:24:06,125 --> 00:24:08,125
And then we were out here by a power pole somewhere.
553
00:24:08,166 --> 00:24:09,959
Right there is the shadow of the power pole.
554
00:24:10,000 --> 00:24:11,166
{\an5}-TRAVIS: Yeah. -THOMAS: Good, good. -SEGALA: Perfect.
555
00:24:11,208 --> 00:24:12,166
TRAVIS: So right there.
556
00:24:12,208 --> 00:24:13,834
So there's one, two...
557
00:24:13,875 --> 00:24:15,917
three... let's see, and we'll need
558
00:24:15,959 --> 00:24:18,750
{\an1}the angles that we measured from each of the points.
559
00:24:18,792 --> 00:24:20,875
We figured out the angles
560
00:24:20,917 --> 00:24:23,458
{\an1}that we were detecting energy from the sky
561
00:24:23,500 --> 00:24:25,000
at three different points.
562
00:24:25,041 --> 00:24:27,166
And these angles are gonna cross
563
00:24:27,208 --> 00:24:28,750
{\an1}at some point above the ranch.
564
00:24:28,792 --> 00:24:32,083
Using some basic high school trigonometry,
565
00:24:32,125 --> 00:24:34,083
{\an1}we can calculate that height.
566
00:24:34,125 --> 00:24:36,875
This one was like that.
567
00:24:36,917 --> 00:24:39,583
Look, they're gonna cross up here somewhere.
568
00:24:39,625 --> 00:24:41,208
SEGALA: Yeah.
569
00:24:41,250 --> 00:24:43,959
TRAVIS: {\an1}And this one was like that.
570
00:24:44,000 --> 00:24:47,625
{\an5}-So how-how high is that? -SEGALA: Who's got that calculator?
571
00:24:49,250 --> 00:24:52,834
Yeah, it's just, it's... it's 5,700 feet.
572
00:24:52,875 --> 00:24:55,000
One mile high.
573
00:24:56,875 --> 00:24:59,709
{\an1}Do we ever see airplanes flying at a mile high over there?
574
00:24:59,750 --> 00:25:01,125
What does that mean, even?
575
00:25:01,166 --> 00:25:02,667
TRAVIS: So, one mile high
576
00:25:02,709 --> 00:25:05,542
is only about a sixth as high as jets fly.
577
00:25:05,583 --> 00:25:07,875
That means that whatever is doing this
578
00:25:07,917 --> 00:25:10,125
{\an1}should be seen by the naked eye.
579
00:25:10,166 --> 00:25:12,750
So why can't we? This just doesn't add up.
580
00:25:12,792 --> 00:25:15,959
We took scientifically accurate measurements,
581
00:25:16,000 --> 00:25:17,250
and they lead us to a spot
582
00:25:17,291 --> 00:25:18,917
somewhere up here over the ranch.
583
00:25:18,959 --> 00:25:20,709
{\an1}That is our next measurement.
584
00:25:20,750 --> 00:25:24,041
{\an1}And the way we could do that {\an1}is we tether a weather balloon
585
00:25:24,083 --> 00:25:26,250
and raise it up through that region,
586
00:25:26,291 --> 00:25:27,917
that has equipment on it.
587
00:25:27,959 --> 00:25:30,291
We get it up there and see if we see something there.
588
00:25:30,333 --> 00:25:33,166
If we see something there, that's even more exciting.
589
00:25:33,208 --> 00:25:36,083
That sounds like fun. {\an1}Hey, th... yeah, that's awesome.
590
00:25:36,125 --> 00:25:39,041
{\an1}Yeah. And every time we think {\an1}we have an idea of a solution,
591
00:25:39,083 --> 00:25:41,625
the answer ends up being something weirder.
592
00:25:50,083 --> 00:25:51,500
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}Hey, Matt.
593
00:25:51,542 --> 00:25:52,709
{\an8}-Hey, Travis. {\an8}-How you doing, man?
594
00:25:52,750 --> 00:25:54,291
{\an8}-I'm great. How are you? {\an8}-Good to see you.
595
00:25:54,333 --> 00:25:55,834
{\an8}-Good to see you, too. {\an8}-This is Thomas.
596
00:25:55,875 --> 00:25:57,875
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}Once we figured out
597
00:25:57,917 --> 00:25:59,166
{\an7}that the strange energy source
598
00:25:59,208 --> 00:26:01,000
{\an8}was coming from {\an7}about a mile above the ranch,
599
00:26:01,041 --> 00:26:02,417
{\an7}I called up a friend of mine,
600
00:26:02,458 --> 00:26:04,208
{\an8}Dr. Matt Turner-- {\an8}he's from the University
601
00:26:04,250 --> 00:26:05,500
{\an8}of Alabama in Huntsville.
602
00:26:05,542 --> 00:26:07,041
{\an8}He's got a PhD in mechanical
603
00:26:07,083 --> 00:26:08,500
{\an8}and aerospace engineering,
604
00:26:08,542 --> 00:26:10,834
{\an8}and he's an expert {\an7}in the use of weather balloons.
605
00:26:10,875 --> 00:26:14,417
{\an8}We've measured {\an7}some really strong RF fields
606
00:26:14,458 --> 00:26:16,417
{\an8}-Mm-hmm. {\an8}-coming from the sky.
607
00:26:16,458 --> 00:26:18,834
{\an8}And so we think {\an8}there's a focus somewhere,
608
00:26:18,875 --> 00:26:21,458
{\an8}and we're guessing {\an7}that the focus may be as much
609
00:26:21,500 --> 00:26:23,375
{\an8}-as a mile high, {\an8}so what I'd like to do {\an8}-Yeah.
610
00:26:23,417 --> 00:26:25,667
{\an8}is set up an experiment, {\an7}and let's start measuring that.
611
00:26:25,709 --> 00:26:26,917
That sounds great.
612
00:26:26,959 --> 00:26:28,792
I got balloons. We've got helium.
613
00:26:28,834 --> 00:26:30,333
We've got some payload platforms.
614
00:26:30,375 --> 00:26:31,709
{\an1}And we just need your meters,
615
00:26:31,750 --> 00:26:33,667
-and we're good to go. -All right.
616
00:26:33,709 --> 00:26:36,000
{\an4}-Let's get everything loaded up, and let's do that. -Excellent.
617
00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:39,959
{\an8}THOMAS: {\an8}You just go down the road,
618
00:26:40,000 --> 00:26:42,333
{\an8}and you hit it {\an8}right over there.
619
00:26:44,750 --> 00:26:47,083
{\an5}TRAVIS: I think this is a good spot, guys.
620
00:26:47,125 --> 00:26:48,625
Based on the triangulation
621
00:26:48,667 --> 00:26:51,458
of where these strange microwave and radio signals
622
00:26:51,500 --> 00:26:54,583
are coming from, what we're going to do is
623
00:26:54,625 --> 00:26:56,250
use a weather balloon with instruments on it
624
00:26:56,291 --> 00:26:57,709
to fly it through
625
00:26:57,750 --> 00:26:59,583
the point on the ranch where we believe
626
00:26:59,625 --> 00:27:00,834
this stuff is coming from.
627
00:27:00,875 --> 00:27:02,834
All right, so, with this balloon,
628
00:27:02,875 --> 00:27:04,166
{\an1}with the tether, especially, we should be able
629
00:27:04,208 --> 00:27:05,542
to pick an altitude
630
00:27:05,583 --> 00:27:07,417
and go to that altitude and measure,
631
00:27:07,458 --> 00:27:08,917
with the TriField meters,
632
00:27:08,959 --> 00:27:11,208
{\an5}-and dial in the altitude that we want. -TRAVIS: Nice.
633
00:27:11,250 --> 00:27:13,083
{\an8}SEGALA: So, at the end {\an7}of the day, if we could have
634
00:27:13,125 --> 00:27:16,125
{\an7}a chart that says altitude, {\an7}RF energy, and show the plot,
635
00:27:16,166 --> 00:27:17,959
{\an8}that would be amazing.
636
00:27:18,000 --> 00:27:20,083
{\an8}TRAVIS: After attaching {\an8}one of our RF meters
637
00:27:20,125 --> 00:27:22,792
{\an8}to measure possible radio {\an8}or microwave energy,
638
00:27:22,834 --> 00:27:24,583
{\an7}we've also attached a camera, {\an8}so that we can photograph
639
00:27:24,625 --> 00:27:27,291
{\an7}what happens when the balloon's {\an8}up in the sky.
640
00:27:27,333 --> 00:27:28,875
MATT: All right, Kaleb.
641
00:27:28,917 --> 00:27:29,917
Fire in the hole.
642
00:27:29,959 --> 00:27:31,083
(gas hissing)
643
00:27:33,834 --> 00:27:36,917
{\an5}MATT: What Travis is trying {\an1}to measure-- I've never heard
644
00:27:36,959 --> 00:27:38,375
{\an1}of that occurring on Earth.
645
00:27:38,417 --> 00:27:40,542
But the physics behind it is sound.
646
00:27:40,583 --> 00:27:44,333
So it could exist-- we just don't know it yet.
647
00:27:44,375 --> 00:27:46,667
-MATT: Okay. -(turns off gas)
648
00:27:46,709 --> 00:27:50,000
{\an5}TRAVIS: So, we're connected to the top of the chute.
649
00:27:50,041 --> 00:27:51,875
Okay, you guys ready?
650
00:27:51,917 --> 00:27:52,875
-Yep. -Good to go.
651
00:27:52,917 --> 00:27:53,917
TRAVIS: All right, here we go.
652
00:27:53,959 --> 00:27:55,542
Jim, watch your head.
653
00:27:55,583 --> 00:27:57,000
All right.
654
00:27:58,291 --> 00:28:00,333
{\an1}All right, slowly let it up.
655
00:28:00,375 --> 00:28:02,500
All right, keep going. You're good.
656
00:28:02,542 --> 00:28:03,959
THOMAS: Hey, we're clear.
657
00:28:04,000 --> 00:28:05,834
TRAVIS: All right.
658
00:28:08,625 --> 00:28:10,375
THOMAS: Man, that's a big balloon.
659
00:28:10,417 --> 00:28:11,959
{\an5}KALEB: I'm surprised there's not any wind blowing
660
00:28:12,000 --> 00:28:13,542
{\an1}-that sucker around right now. -MATT: I know,
661
00:28:13,583 --> 00:28:14,959
I'm extremely surprised.
662
00:28:15,000 --> 00:28:18,250
Yeah, ain't that cool?
663
00:28:18,291 --> 00:28:20,166
{\an5}THOMAS: I can only imagine what the neighbors
664
00:28:20,208 --> 00:28:22,542
-are saying right now. -TRAVIS: Oh, yeah, right?
665
00:28:22,583 --> 00:28:24,500
THOMAS: {\an1}The balloon experiment, for me,
666
00:28:24,542 --> 00:28:27,542
is one of the most important experiments that we've got.
667
00:28:27,583 --> 00:28:30,583
{\an8}Because of my injury {\an8}and what's taken place,
668
00:28:30,625 --> 00:28:34,500
{\an8}I'm very interested {\an7}in these unseen frequencies
669
00:28:34,542 --> 00:28:37,041
{\an8}and signals that {\an8}are going through the air.
670
00:28:37,083 --> 00:28:40,917
This is proving to be one of {\an1}the more significant anomalies
671
00:28:40,959 --> 00:28:43,041
on Skinwalker Ranch.
672
00:28:43,083 --> 00:28:44,583
-MATT: 320 feet. -(low, rapid clicking)
673
00:28:44,625 --> 00:28:46,875
{\an5}-(whirring) -That's not bad. -TRAVIS: Yeah.
674
00:28:46,917 --> 00:28:49,291
Uh, I want to see how high we can get it,
675
00:28:49,333 --> 00:28:52,000
{\an5}-so feed me the spool right through here. -MATT: Through here?
676
00:28:52,041 --> 00:28:53,875
Yeah.
677
00:28:53,917 --> 00:28:55,166
(wind whistling)
678
00:28:55,208 --> 00:28:56,792
{\an1}The wind's picking up, so...
679
00:28:56,834 --> 00:28:59,041
what I'd like to do is pull this thing down,
680
00:28:59,083 --> 00:29:02,709
{\an1}and don't let it hit the grass, 'cause it goes pop.
681
00:29:02,750 --> 00:29:04,875
♪
682
00:29:04,917 --> 00:29:07,083
TRAVIS: {\an1}Yo! Whoa, don't go too fast,
683
00:29:07,125 --> 00:29:09,417
'cause the wind's blowing.
684
00:29:09,458 --> 00:29:11,417
The wind's really picking up now.
685
00:29:11,458 --> 00:29:14,041
We got to let it out now, or it's gonna crash.
686
00:29:14,083 --> 00:29:16,291
Let it go, let it go, let it go, let it go.
687
00:29:16,333 --> 00:29:18,208
{\an4}Hurry, we're gonna lose it. -THOMAS: Cut it? -No, no, no.
688
00:29:18,250 --> 00:29:19,417
No, no, no, no.
689
00:29:19,458 --> 00:29:21,417
Let it spool it, let it spool out.
690
00:29:21,458 --> 00:29:23,875
{\an1}Go up, go up, go up, go up,
691
00:29:23,917 --> 00:29:25,291
go up, go up.
692
00:29:25,333 --> 00:29:26,959
It's going down...
693
00:29:27,000 --> 00:29:28,125
Come on. Up!
694
00:29:28,166 --> 00:29:29,417
We lost her.
695
00:29:33,125 --> 00:29:35,250
We lost it.
696
00:29:35,291 --> 00:29:37,542
{\an1}-I think it broke the line. {\an1}-KALEB: It's all over there.
697
00:29:37,583 --> 00:29:39,667
{\an1}There's that 50-pound test line. That's a lot of pressure.
698
00:29:39,709 --> 00:29:41,041
-There was a lot of wind. -Crap.
699
00:29:41,083 --> 00:29:43,166
Dadgummit.
700
00:29:43,208 --> 00:29:44,834
{\an1}So here's what we're gonna do.
701
00:29:44,875 --> 00:29:47,083
We're gonna go and try and recover the payload,
702
00:29:47,125 --> 00:29:48,709
and if the wind dies down enough,
703
00:29:48,750 --> 00:29:50,959
I say we're gonna forget {\an1}with the tether at this point,
704
00:29:51,000 --> 00:29:52,959
{\an1}and let's just do a free-fly,
705
00:29:53,000 --> 00:29:55,834
{\an5}-let one go with the payload on it. -Okay.
706
00:29:55,875 --> 00:29:58,208
Once we find the balloon {\an1}and get our gear off of it,
707
00:29:58,250 --> 00:30:00,667
{\an1}we're just gonna let the next one get as high as it can.
708
00:30:00,709 --> 00:30:02,417
Hopefully, it'll help us figure out
709
00:30:02,458 --> 00:30:05,083
{\an1}what could be above the ranch {\an1}causing these radiation spikes.
710
00:30:05,125 --> 00:30:06,709
(over radio): {\an1}All right, then we'll meet you
711
00:30:06,750 --> 00:30:08,375
-back at the Jeep. -THOMAS: Okay.
712
00:30:08,417 --> 00:30:11,750
{\an1}We're gonna head back and start {\an1}preparing for the next launch.
713
00:30:11,792 --> 00:30:13,250
This next balloon
714
00:30:13,291 --> 00:30:15,875
{\an1}will not only have the TriField meter and a camera on it,
715
00:30:15,917 --> 00:30:18,542
but also an audio beacon and a GPS device.
716
00:30:18,583 --> 00:30:22,500
That way we can track its location as it gathers data.
717
00:30:28,208 --> 00:30:30,083
-Shut it off. -Okay.
718
00:30:31,250 --> 00:30:33,208
Got a lot of lift on it?
719
00:30:33,250 --> 00:30:34,959
-Yeah. -Mm-hmm.
720
00:30:37,375 --> 00:30:39,417
TRAVIS: All right, we're good.
721
00:30:39,458 --> 00:30:41,959
-(steady beeping) {\an1}-MATT: Yep, yep, yep, we know.
722
00:30:42,000 --> 00:30:44,250
-Audio beacon is on. {\an1}-TRAVIS: We need to let it go.
723
00:30:44,291 --> 00:30:45,625
The wind's kind of dying down-- it'd be
724
00:30:45,667 --> 00:30:47,250
a good time to let it... let it rip.
725
00:30:47,291 --> 00:30:49,291
I mean, it's gonna go like a rocket, right?
726
00:30:49,333 --> 00:30:51,750
{\an5}-Yeah, it's gonna take off pretty quick. -Well, so we hopefully
727
00:30:51,792 --> 00:30:54,083
{\an1}get it to go through the... you know, mile-high mark
728
00:30:54,125 --> 00:30:56,166
that we were calculating.
729
00:30:56,208 --> 00:30:57,625
I'm just hoping that it hits that
730
00:30:57,667 --> 00:30:59,250
before it gets too far to the west.
731
00:30:59,291 --> 00:31:00,709
-You know what I mean? -I hope so, too.
732
00:31:00,750 --> 00:31:02,917
-You got it, Matt? -Yeah, I got it.
733
00:31:02,959 --> 00:31:04,250
-Here we go. -We're clear.
734
00:31:04,291 --> 00:31:06,166
-Start easing it up. -(exclaims)
735
00:31:06,208 --> 00:31:08,750
Start letting it go, start letting it go.
736
00:31:08,792 --> 00:31:11,625
(steady beeping continues)
737
00:31:11,667 --> 00:31:13,417
Three, two, one. Let it launch.
738
00:31:15,375 --> 00:31:18,583
♪
739
00:31:19,625 --> 00:31:20,750
Look how fast it's going.
740
00:31:20,792 --> 00:31:22,166
Hey, I love how it's...
741
00:31:22,208 --> 00:31:24,667
It's going {\an1}right through the spot, too.
742
00:31:24,709 --> 00:31:26,208
That is awesome.
743
00:31:26,250 --> 00:31:28,417
THOMAS: Oh, that is perfect!
744
00:31:28,458 --> 00:31:30,041
{\an1}Right where it needs to be.
745
00:31:31,667 --> 00:31:33,375
{\an5}TRAVIS: That couldn't have worked out better,
746
00:31:33,417 --> 00:31:35,333
-I don't think. {\an1}-MATT: That's a good launch.
747
00:31:35,375 --> 00:31:37,875
{\an1}I say we pack up and go back and try and track it
748
00:31:37,917 --> 00:31:40,667
{\an5}-on the Internet. -MATT: Sounds good. THOMAS: Yep.
749
00:31:40,709 --> 00:31:43,333
♪
750
00:31:51,291 --> 00:31:52,959
{\an8}TRAVIS: Now that we have {\an8}a successful launch,
751
00:31:53,000 --> 00:31:54,583
{\an8}we're going to go track {\an8}the balloon
752
00:31:54,625 --> 00:31:56,000
{\an8}from the command center.
753
00:31:56,041 --> 00:31:57,792
{\an8}If this experiment {\an8}is successful,
754
00:31:57,834 --> 00:31:59,083
{\an7}it'll tell us exactly where
755
00:31:59,125 --> 00:32:00,417
{\an8}these energy spikes {\an8}are occurring,
756
00:32:00,458 --> 00:32:02,959
{\an8}and hopefully, {\an8}what's causing them.
757
00:32:03,000 --> 00:32:04,792
Are you tracking it already?
758
00:32:04,834 --> 00:32:07,458
Yeah. Yeah, come sit down and take a look.
759
00:32:07,500 --> 00:32:10,709
-Can you see okay? -Yeah, I can see good.
760
00:32:10,750 --> 00:32:12,667
MATT: {\an1}What does it look like so far?
761
00:32:12,709 --> 00:32:16,166
Yeah, so, um, we've got a few good hits already.
762
00:32:16,208 --> 00:32:18,125
{\an1}It looks like it's tracking off towards the east.
763
00:32:18,166 --> 00:32:20,208
How high is it right now?
764
00:32:20,250 --> 00:32:21,917
{\an7}Um, it's giving us an altitude,
765
00:32:21,959 --> 00:32:23,917
{\an8}well, above sea level, {\an8}of 10,453.
766
00:32:23,959 --> 00:32:26,542
{\an7}TRAVIS: Now, Skinwalker Ranch {\an8}is already
767
00:32:26,583 --> 00:32:28,458
{\an7}at 5,000 feet above sea level.
768
00:32:28,500 --> 00:32:30,291
And the balloon we're tracking right now
769
00:32:30,333 --> 00:32:33,125
is approximately 5,500 above the ranch.
770
00:32:33,166 --> 00:32:35,125
{\an1}That means its total elevation
771
00:32:35,166 --> 00:32:37,291
is about 10,500 feet.
772
00:32:37,333 --> 00:32:39,709
{\an1}Now, that's pretty much exactly where we believe
773
00:32:39,750 --> 00:32:43,000
the RF energy above the property is coming from.
774
00:32:43,041 --> 00:32:44,875
Well, that is odd, though,
775
00:32:44,917 --> 00:32:47,083
because you'd think it gone more than that
776
00:32:47,125 --> 00:32:49,166
in the time it took us {\an1}to get out there and into here.
777
00:32:49,208 --> 00:32:52,166
-Yeah. -Well, it's-it's not...
778
00:32:52,208 --> 00:32:53,917
This is not updating.
779
00:32:53,959 --> 00:32:55,875
MATT: That's strange to me.
780
00:32:55,917 --> 00:32:57,875
That's supposed to update every minute.
781
00:32:57,917 --> 00:33:01,542
{\an1}It seems to have stopped after {\an1}the 10,000 foot above sea level.
782
00:33:01,583 --> 00:33:04,500
So, when was the last time that-that blip sent data?
783
00:33:04,542 --> 00:33:06,375
{\an1}I mean, how long ago was that, Erik?
784
00:33:06,417 --> 00:33:08,125
{\an5}-A few minutes ago? A minute ago? -Yeah.
785
00:33:08,166 --> 00:33:10,083
{\an5}-It's been a lot more than a minute. -Okay.
786
00:33:10,125 --> 00:33:11,667
And that's-that's baffling to me.
787
00:33:11,709 --> 00:33:14,458
{\an8}The sensor is rock-solid. {\an7}Dude, I have flown this thing
788
00:33:14,500 --> 00:33:16,750
{\an7}30 times, more than 30 times.
789
00:33:16,792 --> 00:33:18,333
{\an8}It's never failed on me.
790
00:33:18,375 --> 00:33:21,458
{\an8}So, I don't understand {\an8}why it went out.
791
00:33:21,500 --> 00:33:23,458
I'm kind of worried about this balloon.
792
00:33:23,500 --> 00:33:25,458
I don't think we've ever had anything
793
00:33:25,500 --> 00:33:27,500
that we could not explain in the atmosphere.
794
00:33:27,542 --> 00:33:28,750
We can usually figure most things out
795
00:33:28,792 --> 00:33:30,000
if we have enough data.
796
00:33:30,041 --> 00:33:31,458
Roughly a mile,
797
00:33:31,500 --> 00:33:33,000
or you know, a little above a mile high,
798
00:33:33,041 --> 00:33:34,417
and it's lost,
799
00:33:34,458 --> 00:33:35,917
which I never thought would happen.
800
00:33:35,959 --> 00:33:37,792
So, what altitude did you say that was?
801
00:33:37,834 --> 00:33:41,041
Well, this is telling us {\an1}10,453 above sea level, so...
802
00:33:41,083 --> 00:33:43,583
{\an1}-What's the altitude of our... -We're about 5,000 here.
803
00:33:43,625 --> 00:33:46,583
Okay. So it's about 5,500 feet.
804
00:33:46,625 --> 00:33:48,125
-Right? -Yeah.
805
00:33:48,166 --> 00:33:49,667
{\an5}-THOMAS: Well, that's interesting. -TRAVIS: Yeah, it is.
806
00:33:49,709 --> 00:33:51,834
{\an5}MATT: So, somewhere, {\an1}the sensor stopped working.
807
00:33:51,875 --> 00:33:54,667
That's right... right where we figure
808
00:33:54,709 --> 00:33:56,834
those, uh, field lines are crossing.
809
00:33:56,875 --> 00:33:58,709
That's right where the triangulation put it.
810
00:33:58,750 --> 00:34:00,875
Oh, wow.
811
00:34:00,917 --> 00:34:03,208
{\an8}THOMAS: {\an8}We did get it to ping
812
00:34:03,250 --> 00:34:05,166
{\an7}as the balloon was going up.
813
00:34:05,208 --> 00:34:08,709
{\an7}So, we know it was transponding {\an7}and-and sending information.
814
00:34:08,750 --> 00:34:11,542
The last ping that we got showed the battery was good,
815
00:34:11,583 --> 00:34:15,083
the temperature was good, everything was functioning
816
00:34:15,125 --> 00:34:16,917
{\an1}properly, and then, magically,
817
00:34:16,959 --> 00:34:19,125
{\an1}it hits this 5,000-foot mark,
818
00:34:19,166 --> 00:34:21,542
and it's... gone.
819
00:34:21,583 --> 00:34:23,917
{\an1}I've flown 30 of these balloons.
820
00:34:23,959 --> 00:34:26,250
{\an1}I've dropped 'em, I've stepped {\an1}on 'em, I've gotten 'em wet.
821
00:34:26,291 --> 00:34:28,250
They've flown through, you know, thunderstorms.
822
00:34:28,291 --> 00:34:30,834
{\an1}-They go up to 100,000 feet. -Yeah, they're rock solid.
823
00:34:30,875 --> 00:34:32,709
{\an1}There must have been something at 5,000 feet
824
00:34:32,750 --> 00:34:34,625
-that shut it off. -Something happened.
825
00:34:34,667 --> 00:34:36,709
TRAVIS: It's crazy that the point
826
00:34:36,750 --> 00:34:38,709
where we lost contact with the balloon
827
00:34:38,750 --> 00:34:41,041
{\an1}is at the exact same altitude we calculated
828
00:34:41,083 --> 00:34:43,166
the RF energy to be coming from.
829
00:34:43,208 --> 00:34:45,333
But where the heck did the balloon go?
830
00:34:45,375 --> 00:34:47,500
{\an1}It's like it just disappeared.
831
00:34:47,542 --> 00:34:51,417
{\an1}Why don't we look at the footage from the tethered test,
832
00:34:51,458 --> 00:34:53,625
and, uh, what I'd like to see is the meter.
833
00:34:53,667 --> 00:34:55,792
{\an5}-Oh. -So we can kind of see what it's doing.
834
00:34:55,834 --> 00:34:57,333
Easy enough.
835
00:34:58,792 --> 00:35:00,792
-(beep) -THOMAS: Whoa!
836
00:35:00,834 --> 00:35:03,750
{\an1}-Look at that. Look at that. -Oh, wow!
837
00:35:03,792 --> 00:35:05,792
-Wow. {\an1}-TRAVIS: Wow. So we're getting
838
00:35:05,834 --> 00:35:08,959
about .3 milliwatts per meter squared.
839
00:35:09,000 --> 00:35:10,375
{\an1}Thought I saw it spike at five.
840
00:35:10,417 --> 00:35:12,041
I thought I... I thought I did, too.
841
00:35:12,083 --> 00:35:14,875
That's like standing by a microwave that's on.
842
00:35:14,917 --> 00:35:17,083
So, this isn't someone {\an1}just sending a Wi-Fi signal
843
00:35:17,125 --> 00:35:18,834
back and forth or anything like that?
844
00:35:18,875 --> 00:35:20,250
{\an1}It can't be at that altitude
845
00:35:20,291 --> 00:35:21,625
{\an1}with these types of spikes, right?
846
00:35:21,667 --> 00:35:23,375
{\an8}-Okay. {\an7}-SEGALA: So one of the things
847
00:35:23,417 --> 00:35:27,125
{\an7}that really jumps out at me {\an8}is that you can tell if
848
00:35:27,166 --> 00:35:29,083
{\an8}a frequency or RF energy
849
00:35:29,125 --> 00:35:31,709
{\an8}comes from the ground, {\an8}as most do,
850
00:35:31,750 --> 00:35:34,083
{\an8}because it will actually {\an8}fall off as you go up.
851
00:35:34,125 --> 00:35:36,667
So, in order {\an1}to create something up there,
852
00:35:36,709 --> 00:35:40,125
{\an1}you have to have an antenna {\an1}up there to create the energy.
853
00:35:40,166 --> 00:35:42,125
{\an1}So, what's disturbing is that
854
00:35:42,166 --> 00:35:44,667
it has to come from something off-planet.
855
00:35:44,709 --> 00:35:46,625
It's not something
856
00:35:46,667 --> 00:35:49,875
that humans have created on the face of the earth.
857
00:35:50,959 --> 00:35:53,291
That's crazy.
858
00:35:53,333 --> 00:35:55,250
Yeah.
859
00:35:55,291 --> 00:35:57,875
So the interpretation {\an1}of this is there's something
860
00:35:57,917 --> 00:36:00,000
{\an1}above us sending signals down.
861
00:36:00,041 --> 00:36:01,959
I mean, yeah, it's coming from above.
862
00:36:02,000 --> 00:36:03,583
{\an5}-It's coming from off-planet, right. -Yeah.
863
00:36:03,625 --> 00:36:06,875
That is what the data is suggesting.
864
00:36:08,041 --> 00:36:09,792
{\an1}A lot of this is not adding up.
865
00:36:09,834 --> 00:36:12,125
{\an5}-ERIK: Right. -THOMAS: So I am sitting in a room
866
00:36:12,166 --> 00:36:13,917
{\an1}full of baffled scientists then?
867
00:36:13,959 --> 00:36:15,625
{\an1}Uh, that sounds about right.
868
00:36:15,667 --> 00:36:17,458
-Yeah. -TRAVIS: There's no
869
00:36:17,500 --> 00:36:20,333
{\an1}known asset that's just sitting right over the ranch.
870
00:36:20,375 --> 00:36:22,500
{\an5}-Yeah. -TRAVIS: So, uh, I'm thinking about
871
00:36:22,542 --> 00:36:25,125
us building a rocket, 'cause we can put sensors
872
00:36:25,166 --> 00:36:28,458
{\an1}on the rocket, measure things {\an1}as it passes through that spot.
873
00:36:28,500 --> 00:36:31,750
{\an5}-Maybe this will help us figure that out. -Right.
874
00:36:31,792 --> 00:36:33,458
{\an5}TRAVIS: Man, I appreciate you coming out, man.
875
00:36:33,500 --> 00:36:34,917
MATT: I'm glad that I could help.
876
00:36:41,083 --> 00:36:42,959
{\an8}TRAVIS: While the team {\an8}and I are waiting
877
00:36:43,000 --> 00:36:44,625
{\an8}for our rocket equipment {\an8}to arrive,
878
00:36:44,667 --> 00:36:46,041
{\an8}Thomas Winterton invited me {\an8}to come with him
879
00:36:46,083 --> 00:36:47,667
{\an8}over to Homestead One.
880
00:36:47,709 --> 00:36:49,125
THOMAS: {\an1}We'll see what we can see, yeah?
881
00:36:49,166 --> 00:36:50,625
All right, let's grab the stuff out.
882
00:36:50,667 --> 00:36:52,542
Now, Homestead One is the homestead
883
00:36:52,583 --> 00:36:54,417
nearest the command center, and it's where
884
00:36:54,458 --> 00:36:57,291
the two caretakers, Kandus and her boyfriend Tom, live.
885
00:36:57,333 --> 00:36:59,250
{\an1}They've only been staying here on the ranch
886
00:36:59,291 --> 00:37:01,125
for a few weeks, and according to Thomas,
887
00:37:01,166 --> 00:37:02,542
they've already been hearing strange sounds
888
00:37:02,583 --> 00:37:04,000
coming from the basement.
889
00:37:04,041 --> 00:37:06,166
{\an7}So I'm really curious to see
890
00:37:06,208 --> 00:37:08,917
{\an7}if what's happening in the house {\an8}could have any connection
891
00:37:08,959 --> 00:37:10,875
{\an8}to what we've been {\an8}experiencing recently
892
00:37:10,917 --> 00:37:12,333
{\an7}in other places on the ranch.
893
00:37:12,375 --> 00:37:14,125
{\an8}-Well, hello. {\an8}-Hey, there.
894
00:37:14,166 --> 00:37:15,917
{\an7}Come on in. What's going on?
895
00:37:15,959 --> 00:37:18,125
{\an8}-Hey, hey. {\an8}-We're gonna see {\an8}if we can have a...
896
00:37:18,166 --> 00:37:20,333
{\an8}We want to look down {\an7}in that thing in your basement. {\an8}-Oh, ho. {\an5}-There's a special camera.
897
00:37:20,375 --> 00:37:21,709
{\an1}-TOM: Oh, you got a camera? -Okay.
898
00:37:21,750 --> 00:37:23,208
-TRAVIS: Yeah. -TOM: Nice.
899
00:37:25,333 --> 00:37:27,875
{\an5}THOMAS: The ranch house has had {\an1}three generations of ownership
900
00:37:27,917 --> 00:37:29,917
before Brandon took possession of it.
901
00:37:32,375 --> 00:37:33,917
Starting with the Meyers,
902
00:37:33,959 --> 00:37:37,125
who reported strange sounds, rumblings.
903
00:37:37,166 --> 00:37:39,709
{\an8}And when the Shermans {\an8}took possession of it
904
00:37:39,750 --> 00:37:42,542
{\an8}from the Meyers, {\an7}there were locks on everything
905
00:37:42,583 --> 00:37:45,667
{\an8}from the cabinet doors {\an8}to the closets.
906
00:37:45,709 --> 00:37:47,500
They started reporting
907
00:37:47,542 --> 00:37:50,083
groceries coming out of the cabinets,
908
00:37:50,125 --> 00:37:52,667
farm equipment ending up in the trees,
909
00:37:52,709 --> 00:37:56,208
all types of weird anomalies that
910
00:37:56,250 --> 00:37:57,875
were pretty scary.
911
00:37:57,917 --> 00:38:00,333
All right, {\an1}if we just head down, then?
912
00:38:00,375 --> 00:38:03,125
KANDUS: Yeah, you go-go ahead.
913
00:38:03,166 --> 00:38:05,709
{\an5}-TOM: {\an1}Yeah, watch your head there. -KANDUS: Yup.
914
00:38:05,750 --> 00:38:07,959
THOMAS: Two weeks ago,
915
00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:09,750
Tom and Kandus reported strange noises
916
00:38:09,792 --> 00:38:11,458
coming from the basement.
917
00:38:11,500 --> 00:38:13,875
I was able to punch {\an1}a small hole through the wall,
918
00:38:13,917 --> 00:38:17,250
{\an1}and we discovered that there was possibly a room there.
919
00:38:17,291 --> 00:38:18,667
{\an1}So there's a room in there?
920
00:38:18,709 --> 00:38:20,125
TOM: There's a room in there.
921
00:38:20,166 --> 00:38:22,917
{\an1}But it goes back quite a ways.
922
00:38:22,959 --> 00:38:24,542
Now the interesting thing about it is,
923
00:38:24,583 --> 00:38:27,417
{\an1}as far we can tell, we can't see {\an1}any pipes coming in or out,
924
00:38:27,458 --> 00:38:29,583
{\an1}and there's no access to it. That's the...
925
00:38:29,625 --> 00:38:31,000
That's the weird thing is
926
00:38:31,041 --> 00:38:32,417
I don't know why you'd have a concrete box
927
00:38:32,458 --> 00:38:34,875
-Completely walled off. -with no access.
928
00:38:34,917 --> 00:38:37,500
Uh, it's-it's weird, man. I don't know what...
929
00:38:37,542 --> 00:38:39,875
-It's just out of place. -Yeah.
930
00:38:39,917 --> 00:38:42,667
{\an8}-You know? {\an8}-Well, let's get in there. {\an7}TRAVIS: Let's get this thing {\an5}hooked up and take a look.
931
00:38:42,709 --> 00:38:45,166
{\an8}A room {\an7}that's completely closed off
932
00:38:45,208 --> 00:38:47,500
{\an1}in the basement with no doors, and no doors
933
00:38:47,542 --> 00:38:49,750
being prepared to be built on it or maybe,
934
00:38:49,792 --> 00:38:52,333
there was never any intent to put a door on it--
935
00:38:52,375 --> 00:38:54,000
it's horror movie stuff.
936
00:38:54,041 --> 00:38:56,166
Is this gonna fit through that hole?
937
00:38:56,208 --> 00:38:57,834
THOMAS: I'm pretty sure it will.
938
00:38:57,875 --> 00:39:00,709
{\an1}-If not, we'll make it bigger. -All right.
939
00:39:00,750 --> 00:39:02,125
Yeah, I mean, everything's connected
940
00:39:02,166 --> 00:39:03,917
{\an1}the way it's supposed to be.
941
00:39:03,959 --> 00:39:06,583
-All right, there we go. -THOMAS: Got it?
942
00:39:06,625 --> 00:39:07,917
Does that seem like it's gonna stay?
943
00:39:07,959 --> 00:39:09,166
Yeah, I think... I think it will.
944
00:39:09,208 --> 00:39:10,458
-Okay. -All right.
945
00:39:17,166 --> 00:39:19,959
{\an5}-THOMAS: We're in. -KANDUS: Oh, wow. -TOM: Cool.
946
00:39:20,000 --> 00:39:22,250
-It's bone-dry in there. -Mm.
947
00:39:22,291 --> 00:39:23,959
TRAVIS: {\an1}So, it means it's not leaking,
948
00:39:24,000 --> 00:39:27,875
or there's no external entrances to it.
949
00:39:27,917 --> 00:39:30,709
TOM: {\an1}So it looks square, doesn't it?
950
00:39:30,750 --> 00:39:33,375
THOMAS: Yeah, definitely square.
951
00:39:33,417 --> 00:39:35,083
Well, look how thick that concrete is.
952
00:39:35,125 --> 00:39:36,709
I mean, that tells you just how strong it is.
953
00:39:36,750 --> 00:39:38,208
TRAVIS: {\an1}That's heavy duty, something.
954
00:39:38,250 --> 00:39:41,500
You know, that's-that's a foot thick on top.
955
00:39:41,542 --> 00:39:44,625
{\an5}I'm gonna try {\an1}to angle this down a little bit {\an1}and just check along this wall.
956
00:39:44,667 --> 00:39:50,667
{\an4}-TRAVIS: That's a good idea. {\an5}That's a real good idea. -KANDUS: Mm. TRAVIS: Oh, what is that?
957
00:39:50,709 --> 00:39:53,041
Is that a drain?
958
00:39:53,083 --> 00:39:54,750
What is that?
959
00:39:54,792 --> 00:39:57,625
{\an5}TRAVIS: Go all the way down to it if you can.
960
00:39:59,500 --> 00:40:01,959
{\an5}-What is that? -KANDUS: What is that? {\an1}-It looks like rubble to me.
961
00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:03,792
-It does. -Yeah, it's rubble,
962
00:40:03,834 --> 00:40:06,125
{\an7}but where... rubble from what?
963
00:40:06,166 --> 00:40:08,208
THOMAS: {\an1}I wonder, when I drilled this,
964
00:40:08,250 --> 00:40:11,166
if it didn't beat it in, and it popped in there.
965
00:40:11,208 --> 00:40:13,959
KANDUS: That looks like way more material
966
00:40:14,000 --> 00:40:17,792
{\an5}-that would have {\an5}come out of that hole. -That's way more material than that hole.
967
00:40:17,834 --> 00:40:21,417
See, go a little bit lower if you can.
968
00:40:21,458 --> 00:40:23,458
Oh, slow down, slow down, slow down.
969
00:40:25,875 --> 00:40:28,792
That looks like kindling or something.
970
00:40:28,834 --> 00:40:31,250
THOMAS: I don't know what
971
00:40:31,291 --> 00:40:32,583
the black stuff is. That is really weird.
972
00:40:32,625 --> 00:40:34,375
KANDUS: It looks like charcoal.
973
00:40:34,417 --> 00:40:38,667
{\an5}- It... it might be ash. {\an1}- It looks ashy and black flecks and charcoal.
974
00:40:38,709 --> 00:40:42,250
{\an1}It sure does. It looks like {\an1}there's been a fire in there.
975
00:40:42,291 --> 00:40:44,125
TOM: It does.
976
00:40:44,166 --> 00:40:47,583
{\an1}That's-that's a little creepy right there.
977
00:40:50,000 --> 00:40:52,291
TRAVIS: Right in the bottom,
978
00:40:52,333 --> 00:40:55,250
{\an1}there's a pile about the size, of, say, a volleyball,
979
00:40:55,291 --> 00:40:57,834
and it looked like ash,
980
00:40:57,875 --> 00:40:59,417
but how did it get in there,
981
00:40:59,458 --> 00:41:01,458
and what's the purpose of it being there?
982
00:41:01,500 --> 00:41:03,875
{\an1}It makes no sense what this is.
983
00:41:03,917 --> 00:41:07,041
How could you build a fire {\an1}in there without suffocating?
984
00:41:07,083 --> 00:41:08,583
THOMAS: Why would you?
985
00:41:08,625 --> 00:41:10,166
{\an7}-TRAVIS: I mean, is it an oven? {\an7}-KANDUS: Well, yeah, almost
986
00:41:10,208 --> 00:41:12,250
{\an8}looks like a cremation. {\an8}-THOMAS: So it looks {\an8}like ash, huh?
987
00:41:15,417 --> 00:41:16,792
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}Hey, hold on a minute.
988
00:41:19,333 --> 00:41:21,333
{\an7}What are those white pieces {\an8}right there?
989
00:41:21,375 --> 00:41:22,917
{\an8}THOMAS: {\an8}I'm wondering if that's...
990
00:41:22,959 --> 00:41:24,709
{\an7}-It looks a lot like bones. {\an7}-KANDUS: Is that even bone?
991
00:41:25,792 --> 00:41:27,125
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an8}Bones?
992
00:41:27,166 --> 00:41:29,166
{\an8}What in the world?
993
00:41:33,000 --> 00:41:34,542
{\an5}TRAVIS: We need to see what's really in there.
994
00:41:34,583 --> 00:41:36,667
{\an5}-What is that? -ERIK: It could be human remains.
995
00:41:36,709 --> 00:41:38,542
{\an5}THOMAS: We have a couple trucks bringing cattle.
996
00:41:38,583 --> 00:41:41,166
Each cow we bring on is another biosensor.
997
00:41:41,208 --> 00:41:43,125
{\an5}TRAVIS: There's some signal coming from space.
998
00:41:43,166 --> 00:41:45,041
-Inserting safety key. -Ignition.
999
00:41:45,083 --> 00:41:47,542
{\an1}So we're gonna use rockets and {\an1}see what's going on up there.
1000
00:41:47,583 --> 00:41:50,875
{\an5}-What the heck's up with the cows? -(loud lowing)
1001
00:41:50,917 --> 00:41:52,583
-THOMAS: Look, look, look! -BRYANT: What is that?
1002
00:41:52,625 --> 00:41:54,667
-What is that? -KAITLIN: What is that?
1003
00:41:54,709 --> 00:41:56,417
{\an8}THOMAS: {\an8}It's gone. Did you see it? {\an7}TRAVIS: It's gone. Yes, I saw {\an5}it! It's gone.
1004
00:41:56,458 --> 00:41:59,250
{\an8}BRANDON: {\an8}I think that's historic.
82022
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