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{\an8}Look at that jumping. {\an8}Look-it, it's going nuts.
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{\an1}Radiation spikes keep occurring across the ranch.
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I get my biggest readings looking up.
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TRAVIS: It's coming from the sky.
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The measurements lead us to a spot one mile high.
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Ignition.
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{\an1}The team and I sent up rockets {\an1}to try and identify the source.
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{\an4}-We got something. Hold on. -Look, look, look! -What is that?
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{\an5}TRAVIS: {\an5}That wasn't a plane. -Oh, there it is again! -There it is again!
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{\an1}-It's still in the same spot! -Right there.
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TRAVIS: Let's look at the surveillance footage
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{\an5}and see if there's something in it. There it is. We saw a UFO.
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- And the fact we have...
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...captured this on camera...
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...is nothing short of historic.
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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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{\an1}and unusual energies that have proven harmful to humans.
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{\an8}For 20 years, {\an8}the federal government
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tried to find answers and failed.
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Now a new team of dedicated scientists,
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researchers and experts has taken over.
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{\an1}They are determined to solve the mystery and reveal...
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{\an8}(insects chirping)
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{\an1}(bird warbling in distance)
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(dog barking)
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TRAVIS: Gol' dang it, William.
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What are you barking at?
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{\an7}So, William just woke me up.
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{\an8}It's, like, 4:51 a.m. {\an8}in the morning,
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{\an1}and he's barking like crazy,
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and he took off running out across the field.
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I'm gonna go see if I can see what it was.
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(unlocking door)
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(sighs)
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All right, William, what are you barking at?
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For the past few days,
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I've been staying overnight on the ranch.
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{\an1}That way, I can catch strange {\an1}things as they're happening,
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but I wasn't expecting {\an1}those things to happen so soon.
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{\an1}Sounds like there's something
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just screeching in the background.
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{\an1}(distant, rhythmic crackling)
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{\an1}I... I don't know what that is,
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but I'm gonna go look on the spectrum analyzer
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and see if maybe... {\an1}maybe it's something on it.
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Maybe... this sound
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has something to do {\an1}with the crazy microwave signals
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we've been seeing.
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(sighs) Turn this computer on.
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Um...
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All right, let's turn this thing on.
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{\an1}(low, electronic crackling)
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What is that?
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{\an1}I'm not sure what I'm seeing.
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Wow!
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I mean, the-the... there's {\an1}a signal oscillating up and down
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between, like, 20-something meg...
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26-ish megahertz
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{\an1}all the way up to two gigahertz.
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This is crazy.
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I'm getting a huge and constant level
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of radio waves across the {\an1}entire frequency spectral band.
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{\an1}It's like turning on a radio {\an1}and having every single station
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{\an1}playing the exact same song at the exact same level.
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Now, if I move it across, look at the signal.
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It's extremely sinusoidal, {\an1}and it has a lot of structure.
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I've never seen anything like it.
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It just keeps on going {\an1}all the way across the spectrum.
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Wow!
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That's just insane.
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I don't... I don't know what to think about this.
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I've never seen anything like it in my life.
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♪
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{\an1}I called you guys here 'cause {\an1}I wanted to talk to you about
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what happened to me this morning.
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You know, at, uh, 4:51, {\an1}William woke me up barking,
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and I went outside {\an1}to see if I could figure out
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{\an1}what he was barking at, and-and {\an1}I hear off in the distance
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{\an1}this weird "wah, wah, wah."
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{\an7}So I figured I'd go in and look {\an8}on the spectrum analyzer,
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{\an8}and I'm seeing all these {\an7}signals, from the microwave band
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{\an8}all the way down past {\an7}the ham bands at 35 megahertz.
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{\an7}Now, to do that, it would be...
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{\an8}I don't even know {\an8}how we would do that.
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That's... {\an1}it's-it's almost impossible.
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Since I've been here with the team
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{\an1}investigating Skinwalker Ranch,
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a lot of strange and bizarre things
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have been happening.
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{\an1}-Look, look. Did you see that? -What is that?
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We've seen strange lights and glowing effects
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coming off the mesa.
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My head is hurting bad.
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Well, let's get you the heck out of here, man.
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We've had people {\an1}suddenly getting lightheaded
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or, in the case of Tom Winterton,
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getting severe pain {\an1}and swelling in their scalp.
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Look-it, it's going nuts.
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{\an1}We've discovered that dangerous {\an1}levels of transient radiation
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are coming from an area {\an1}about a mile above the ranch.
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It's coming from up there.
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And when we tried to investigate it
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{\an1}with a weather balloon, it just {\an1}disappeared without a trace.
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-Where the hell is it? -Oh, wow.
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{\an1}And then, just one week ago...
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-Ignition. -...we launched a series
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of rockets up into that same spot...
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{\an5}-Look, look, look. -What is that? -...and suddenly...
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-There it is again! -...the entire team
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witnessed two UFOs, clear as day.
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THOMAS: It's gone.
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So, here's one thing {\an1}that it could possibly mean.
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This might sound crazy, but what if the only way
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to explain all these things is...
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...with a wormhole?
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Now, although the existence of wormholes
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hasn't been proven yet, Albert Einstein theorized
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that they do exist, and assuming you have
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a massive amount of energy to cause one,
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they could connect two different points
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in space and time.
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{\an1}I know it's a far-fetched idea, {\an1}but it's about the only thing
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{\an1}that I can think of that could {\an1}be responsible for everything
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that's been reported to have happened up here.
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So, imagine you've got...
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a bowl...
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that's the Uinta Basin.
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-Okay. -And it's roughly...
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70 miles...
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in diameter across, right?
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{\an1}Well, and it's gonna focus {\an1}like this big satellite dish.
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Whatever energy hits it, {\an1}it's gonna be focused back up
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to a single point.
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So, what does that mean?
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Is this the spot where {\an1}something weird is happening,
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where all this energy is being created
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where there was events happening?
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Are you thinking of this location
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{\an1}as-as a place where the energy is emanating from
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or a place {\an1}where it's being harvested?
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TRAVIS: That's a good question.
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What if the Uinta Basin--
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{\an1}it's got jaggies and things in it--
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{\an1}it could be looking like a lens, and the source
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could be beneath it, {\an1}and it could be underground
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{\an1}from the center of the Earth coming up
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and then being focused to a point.
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But the point is, there is a bunch of energy
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being focused into a single, tiny spot.
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And the question is:
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Is this crazy signal we're seeing...
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doing that?
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Is it creating some type of event
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{\an1}that is something like Einstein, you know, theor...
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{\an1}was theorizing, and then...
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is like you see in science-fiction movies?
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So, in other words, what we're saying is that
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{\an1}to us, standing here, this {\an1}could look like an orb to us.
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Or it could look like a portal to us.
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We have all these crazy gamma and neutrons.
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It could also create
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some of the weird other {\an1}RF signals that we're seeing.
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{\an1}That's a really good point.
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-Yeah. -Yeah.
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{\an8}In 2016, {\an7}I purchased Skinwalker Ranch
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{\an8}from Robert Bigelow.
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Prior to transfer of ownership,
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Bigelow cautioned me that we were dealing with forces
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that are very powerful,
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{\an1}that are not easily understood or characterized.
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There are amazing stories
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{\an1}claiming that one of the most interesting observations
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made by not only Bigelow's team but others
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is the presence of portals
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that have appeared {\an1}in the area of the homesteads.
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Literally midair,
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they've seen truly a window
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into what appeared to be another world--
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other skylines or other landscapes
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that they could see through those portals
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that-that are difficult to describe.
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You realize how...
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{\an1}-outlandish this whole thing... {\an1}-It sounds crazy and nuts.
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{\an1}Absolutely crazy and nuts, {\an1}and this is the only theory
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-we've come up with yet. {\an1}-That encompasses all of...
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That-that-that everything {\an1}we've measured, heard, seen,
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stories, craziness,
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it all can be tied into this explanation.
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{\an1}But it's interesting that we've {\an1}got at least a hypothesis.
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{\an1}Energy's coming from the Earth, and it's getting focused
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{\an1}-to a spot up there, but... -Yeah.
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...a hypothesis isn't worth anything
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unless you can create an experiment
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to test that hypothesis.
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{\an1}So we understand the hypothesis.
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{\an1}I think we go and figure out if the energy source
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may be coming from inside the Earth.
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That's here under Skinwalker Ranch.
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We should go and see if we can measure
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{\an1}these weird signals down there.
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We need to do ground-penetrating radar.
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{\an1}We've got to do resistivity {\an1}measurements out in the field.
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Now, there's an experiment we could do.
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Yeah. It gives us a place to start looking.
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TRAVIS: So maybe that's it.
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Maybe the tremendous energy source
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we would have to have {\an1}to produce this portal effect
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{\an1}is located deep underground.
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That would validate {\an1}what Eric suspected all along.
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{\an1}All right, so I say we quit talking about it,
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and then we get up and go start figuring out
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{\an1}-what we got to do to do it. -I agree.
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{\an5}-All right, let's do this. -Okay, cool. -Okay.
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{\an7}TRAVIS: Because we don't know {\an7}if the strange radiation surges
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{\an7}we've been getting are coming
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{\an8}from high above the ranch {\an8}or below it,
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{\an7}we've invited a team of experts {\an8}to come up here
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{\an8}and conduct a series {\an8}of noninvasive tests.
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-How's it going? -Good. How are you?
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-Good. -That way,
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if there really is something dangerous
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or life-threatening underground,
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{\an1}we might be able to find out what it is
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before we start digging.
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{\an7}We haven't done experiments yet {\an7}to look beneath the surface. {\an8}-Okay. {\an5}-So, we've been doing
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{\an8}some measurements {\an8}with these signals
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{\an7}that we've been picking up, {\an7}and we've kind of triangulated {\an8}a few hot spots,
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{\an1}and this is the starting line.
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{\an1}And anywhere there's a roadway,
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{\an1}flat surface along all the way {\an1}from the gate on the east end
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{\an1}to the fence on the west end, {\an1}just start mapping it out.
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Then we'll go from there to the mesa,
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{\an1}and then maybe out into the {\an1}field and around the homesteads.
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Okay.
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Since there is so much varied area
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{\an1}of Skinwalker Ranch to cover,
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we decided to use two different methods
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00:10:48,250 --> 00:10:49,834
{\an1}to search below the surface.
243
00:10:49,875 --> 00:10:53,583
One is GPR, {\an1}or ground-penetrating radar,
244
00:10:53,625 --> 00:10:56,291
which works by sending {\an1}radio waves down into the earth
245
00:10:56,333 --> 00:10:59,750
{\an1}that will bounce off of any {\an1}solid objects or structures.
246
00:10:59,792 --> 00:11:02,041
And soil resistivity,
247
00:11:02,083 --> 00:11:03,542
which does pretty much the same thing,
248
00:11:03,583 --> 00:11:05,834
but it uses metal stakes and wires
249
00:11:05,875 --> 00:11:08,375
to send electrical currents down into the ground.
250
00:11:08,417 --> 00:11:11,542
So, what we should do {\an1}is kind of divide and conquer.
251
00:11:11,583 --> 00:11:13,750
I think, uh, half of us will work
252
00:11:13,792 --> 00:11:15,834
{\an1}on the ground-penetrating radar, and the other half
253
00:11:15,875 --> 00:11:18,083
will do the resistivity measurements.
254
00:11:18,125 --> 00:11:19,959
Truck's right here, {\an1}it's a good place to start.
255
00:11:20,000 --> 00:11:22,500
{\an1}So just pull the equipment out, {\an1}and let's-let's just get going.
256
00:11:22,542 --> 00:11:24,125
-All right, sounds good. -Let's get her out.
257
00:11:24,166 --> 00:11:26,250
-Let's get to it. -ERIK: Here on the ranch,
258
00:11:26,291 --> 00:11:30,458
we have seen a correlation between digging activities
259
00:11:30,500 --> 00:11:32,875
and some injuries to individuals.
260
00:11:32,917 --> 00:11:34,709
{\an8}So I've taken the position
261
00:11:34,750 --> 00:11:36,583
{\an8}that invasive activities {\an8}like digging
262
00:11:36,625 --> 00:11:41,208
{\an8}should be first justified {\an8}by less invasive methods.
263
00:11:41,250 --> 00:11:43,792
Come on back. Ho, ho, ho.
264
00:11:43,834 --> 00:11:45,750
{\an5}ERIK: A good example of that is the GPR survey
265
00:11:45,792 --> 00:11:47,709
and the resistivity measurements.
266
00:11:47,750 --> 00:11:51,250
{\an1}Those are the kinds of things {\an1}that put exercises like digging
267
00:11:51,291 --> 00:11:54,000
or drilling on a more firm foundation.
268
00:11:54,041 --> 00:11:58,208
Particularly in view {\an1}of the fact that human safety
269
00:11:58,250 --> 00:12:02,166
{\an1}and life is held in the balance.
270
00:12:02,208 --> 00:12:04,750
{\an1}We've got everything loaded to {\an1}do the resistivity measurements.
271
00:12:04,792 --> 00:12:07,250
{\an1}So, uh, why don't we take it over there, and you guys
272
00:12:07,291 --> 00:12:08,917
are gonna continue with the GPR, right?
273
00:12:08,959 --> 00:12:10,291
-Correct. -All right.
274
00:12:10,333 --> 00:12:11,917
{\an8}I gave them the flags. {\an8}Mark the spots
275
00:12:11,959 --> 00:12:13,083
{\an7}if you find anything weird.
276
00:12:13,125 --> 00:12:14,291
{\an8}All right. Let's load up.
277
00:12:14,333 --> 00:12:15,458
-Sounds good. -Let's roll.
278
00:12:15,500 --> 00:12:17,166
I got shotgun.
279
00:12:20,834 --> 00:12:22,917
{\an5}PHIL: So, guys, what we'll be doing now
280
00:12:22,959 --> 00:12:24,709
{\an1}is we're gonna be pulling this.
281
00:12:24,750 --> 00:12:26,750
Uh, this is our GX160.
282
00:12:26,792 --> 00:12:29,500
we're gonna be pulling it behind this ATV.
283
00:12:29,542 --> 00:12:32,083
And we'll figure out {\an1}a suitable way to pull that.
284
00:12:32,125 --> 00:12:34,375
{\an8}I think I've got an idea {\an8}of how we can do it
285
00:12:34,417 --> 00:12:35,959
{\an7}-so it doesn't slide around. {\an8}-Right.
286
00:12:36,000 --> 00:12:39,125
{\an8}Okay, and then we'll use {\an8}the dual-frequency system
287
00:12:39,166 --> 00:12:41,333
{\an8}to do the homestead work.
288
00:12:41,375 --> 00:12:43,667
-Sounds great. -Cool. All right.
289
00:12:43,709 --> 00:12:47,333
What we're going to do is pull this latch up.
290
00:12:47,375 --> 00:12:52,875
{\an1}And then what we'll do here {\an1}is we've got two power buttons.
291
00:12:52,917 --> 00:12:55,500
We've got a power button on the monitor,
292
00:12:55,542 --> 00:12:58,041
and we have one down here on the antenna,
293
00:12:58,083 --> 00:13:01,375
and that will fire the system up.
294
00:13:05,875 --> 00:13:08,125
PHIL: Oh, my gosh.
295
00:13:08,166 --> 00:13:11,959
This was fully charged, {\an1}so I'm... it's-it's a mystery.
296
00:13:12,000 --> 00:13:13,792
ERIK: So, we can't start now?
297
00:13:13,834 --> 00:13:15,834
We actually can't start with this system.
298
00:13:15,875 --> 00:13:18,750
{\an1}At least with the-the battery this low.
299
00:13:18,792 --> 00:13:21,250
{\an5}ERIK: Why would it be down in the red now?
300
00:13:21,291 --> 00:13:23,041
That's a good question, because it...
301
00:13:23,083 --> 00:13:25,166
the system has to be on
302
00:13:25,208 --> 00:13:28,291
in order for it to utilize {\an1}those lithium-ion batteries.
303
00:13:29,834 --> 00:13:32,542
Uh, why don't we check the other system?
304
00:13:32,583 --> 00:13:34,750
{\an1}It was completely powered, too, and let's just see
305
00:13:34,792 --> 00:13:37,583
{\an5}-what the batteries look like on that. -Yeah that's a good idea.
306
00:13:37,625 --> 00:13:39,792
{\an5}ERIK: It's not uncommon that we experience problems
307
00:13:39,834 --> 00:13:43,375
{\an1}with battery-powered systems on this property.
308
00:13:43,417 --> 00:13:45,542
{\an7}Everything from mobile devices, {\an7}including our cell phones,
309
00:13:45,583 --> 00:13:48,542
{\an8}our tablets, uh, {\an8}laptop computers,
310
00:13:48,583 --> 00:13:50,542
{\an8}audio/video equipment,
311
00:13:50,583 --> 00:13:53,291
{\an8}have experienced {\an8}some kind of an anomaly,
312
00:13:53,333 --> 00:13:56,792
{\an7}as a result of some influence {\an7}that is prevalent on the ranch.
313
00:13:56,834 --> 00:13:59,250
{\an8}Dude, I will tell {\an7}my phone battery just went...
314
00:13:59,291 --> 00:14:01,583
{\an5}-(blows raspberry) -Your battery's dead on your phone?
315
00:14:01,625 --> 00:14:03,417
{\an5}TRAVIS: {\an1}Yeah. Your battery's dead, too, ain't it?
316
00:14:03,458 --> 00:14:05,834
{\an8}It shut off.
317
00:14:05,875 --> 00:14:07,959
{\an4}-Welcome to Skinwalker Ranch, right? -Right.
318
00:14:08,000 --> 00:14:11,542
I completely charged these four batteries
319
00:14:11,583 --> 00:14:14,667
last evening, {\an1}and now they're into the...
320
00:14:14,709 --> 00:14:16,250
to the yellow section.
321
00:14:17,709 --> 00:14:19,458
ERIK: {\an1}When have you seen that before?
322
00:14:19,500 --> 00:14:21,709
I, quite frankly, have not seen that before.
323
00:14:23,792 --> 00:14:25,875
{\an5}ERIK: Hey, Bryant? Come here, check this out.
324
00:14:25,917 --> 00:14:27,667
So, Phil, would you like {\an1}to explain what you just...
325
00:14:27,709 --> 00:14:29,417
Right, we were getting some highly unusual
326
00:14:29,458 --> 00:14:31,000
battery level there.
327
00:14:31,041 --> 00:14:33,375
Uh, we should be seeing full power there,
328
00:14:33,417 --> 00:14:35,166
and we're seeing about 50%, so...
329
00:14:35,208 --> 00:14:38,125
{\an5}BRYANT: It's another damn battery that's getting trashed.
330
00:14:38,166 --> 00:14:40,166
I guess we'll just keep an eye on it.
331
00:14:40,208 --> 00:14:42,750
I guess you go until it goes off.
332
00:14:42,792 --> 00:14:44,542
-All right. -Yep.
333
00:14:44,583 --> 00:14:48,083
{\an5}ERIK: We've decided to proceed by dragging
334
00:14:48,125 --> 00:14:50,917
one of the instruments behind the UTV.
335
00:14:50,959 --> 00:14:54,500
So, what I did is I ran a wire underneath here,
336
00:14:54,542 --> 00:14:57,375
attached to the body, to hold this tight.
337
00:14:57,417 --> 00:14:59,333
{\an1}-PHIL: Looks very solid to me. -All right.
338
00:14:59,375 --> 00:15:01,417
{\an5}- Hey Erik. -Let's go drag this thing. -ERIK: Yeah?
339
00:15:01,458 --> 00:15:02,458
My phone's freaking out.
340
00:15:03,291 --> 00:15:05,667
{\an8}Just want you to see it.
341
00:15:05,709 --> 00:15:07,333
-ERIK: What is it doing? -I don't know.
342
00:15:07,375 --> 00:15:09,000
It's just been... it's just been doing this
343
00:15:09,041 --> 00:15:10,500
for the last, you know, couple minutes.
344
00:15:10,542 --> 00:15:12,583
I just ran up here so you could see it.
345
00:15:12,625 --> 00:15:15,291
{\an1}It was in my contacts, it tried {\an1}calling a couple of people,
346
00:15:15,333 --> 00:15:18,125
um, and then it's been {\an1}messing around in my camera
347
00:15:18,166 --> 00:15:19,792
the last couple minutes.
348
00:15:19,834 --> 00:15:22,834
-When did this start? {\an1}-About two, three minutes ago.
349
00:15:24,750 --> 00:15:26,583
{\an5}ERIK: It's as if someone was pushing the buttons
350
00:15:26,625 --> 00:15:28,291
and, uh, switching between applications
351
00:15:28,333 --> 00:15:31,083
and sending messages and making phone calls
352
00:15:31,125 --> 00:15:33,208
as fast as anyone could possibly do it.
353
00:15:33,250 --> 00:15:35,375
Dude, that is crazy.
354
00:15:35,417 --> 00:15:37,417
(laughing)
355
00:15:39,750 --> 00:15:43,041
We're laughing at it, but {\an1}I'm not sure that we should be.
356
00:15:49,250 --> 00:15:52,208
{\an7}TRAVIS: While Erik and Dragon {\an7}are working with Phil Oviatt
357
00:15:52,250 --> 00:15:55,375
{\an8}to run GPR from the command {\an7}center to the old homesteads,
358
00:15:55,417 --> 00:15:58,375
{\an7}Jim, Tom and I are heading out {\an8}with Zach Zyla
359
00:15:58,417 --> 00:16:00,375
{\an7}to do a soil resistivity survey.
360
00:16:00,417 --> 00:16:05,333
{\an8}So, Zach, we're interested {\an8}in this field out here.
361
00:16:05,375 --> 00:16:08,291
There's some rumors and stories and myths
362
00:16:08,333 --> 00:16:10,125
and all sorts of things.
363
00:16:10,166 --> 00:16:13,792
There might be underground facilities
364
00:16:13,834 --> 00:16:17,417
or bases or other stuff {\an1}inside this field out here.
365
00:16:17,458 --> 00:16:18,709
-ZACH: Yep. -So, if there's something
366
00:16:18,750 --> 00:16:21,083
besides a field in it, let us know.
367
00:16:21,125 --> 00:16:22,959
ZACH: All right.
368
00:16:23,000 --> 00:16:25,458
{\an5}TRAVIS: All right, so what do we need to do to get started?
369
00:16:25,500 --> 00:16:28,458
{\an4}ZACH: All right, well let's, uh, {\an4}get the gear out of the truck and, uh, start laying out the lines.
370
00:16:28,500 --> 00:16:30,500
All right.
371
00:16:30,542 --> 00:16:31,792
{\an1}All right, so what goes first?
372
00:16:31,834 --> 00:16:33,458
ZACH: {\an1}So, every six feet, we're gonna
373
00:16:33,500 --> 00:16:35,041
{\an5}-place one of these into the ground. -All right.
374
00:16:35,083 --> 00:16:36,375
{\an1}And then you're gonna start.
375
00:16:36,417 --> 00:16:37,959
And you're gonna want to pound it in
376
00:16:38,000 --> 00:16:39,041
about three-quarters of the way
377
00:16:39,083 --> 00:16:40,625
so we get good contact into the ground.
378
00:16:40,667 --> 00:16:42,083
-TRAVIS: All right. -Next,
379
00:16:42,125 --> 00:16:43,959
{\an1}you're gonna take one of these connector cables
380
00:16:44,000 --> 00:16:46,291
{\an1}and connect it to the base.
381
00:16:46,333 --> 00:16:49,041
{\an1}And we're gonna keep moving it {\an1}along all the way to the end.
382
00:16:49,083 --> 00:16:51,500
{\an1}You know what, you drive stakes, {\an1}I'll clip wires. How's that?
383
00:16:51,542 --> 00:16:53,333
SEGALA: I could do that.
384
00:17:00,667 --> 00:17:03,250
{\an5}ZACH: All right, so let me get started.
385
00:17:03,291 --> 00:17:06,000
How quick will it take us {\an1}to actually see something, Zach?
386
00:17:06,041 --> 00:17:07,709
Hopefully, not more than about ten minutes.
387
00:17:07,750 --> 00:17:08,750
Okay.
388
00:17:08,792 --> 00:17:10,083
ZACH: All right.
389
00:17:10,125 --> 00:17:11,208
The line is hot,
390
00:17:11,250 --> 00:17:12,709
{\an1}so everyone please be careful.
391
00:17:12,750 --> 00:17:14,083
{\an1}It's about to start measuring, and hopefully
392
00:17:14,125 --> 00:17:15,417
{\an1}we can get some, uh, good data.
393
00:17:15,458 --> 00:17:16,625
All right, well, good.
394
00:17:16,667 --> 00:17:18,250
Uh, I guess we just wait.
395
00:17:22,000 --> 00:17:24,583
{\an8}ERIK: Am I holding a speed {\an8}that you like there?
396
00:17:24,625 --> 00:17:26,667
{\an8}-PHIL: Yeah, you're good. {\an8}-Okay.
397
00:17:27,959 --> 00:17:29,625
It's gonna get a little bumpy here.
398
00:17:29,667 --> 00:17:31,458
{\an5}BRYANT: Yeah, I think it goes without saying
399
00:17:31,500 --> 00:17:33,083
just be careful going through the dips.
400
00:17:33,125 --> 00:17:35,000
ERIK: Yeah.
401
00:17:35,041 --> 00:17:37,291
{\an1}That thing works like a champ.
402
00:17:37,333 --> 00:17:39,750
It does.
403
00:17:42,083 --> 00:17:44,166
Well, I'm anxious {\an1}to get up by the homestead.
404
00:17:44,208 --> 00:17:45,959
-Well, we're just about... -I know, I know,
405
00:17:46,000 --> 00:17:47,458
we're getting close.
406
00:17:51,792 --> 00:17:53,333
What was that?
407
00:17:53,375 --> 00:17:55,959
PHIL: I don't know.
408
00:17:56,000 --> 00:17:58,291
Could be...
409
00:17:58,333 --> 00:18:00,250
I don't know what that is.
410
00:18:00,291 --> 00:18:03,125
I mean, we certainly see a difference
411
00:18:03,166 --> 00:18:05,166
than this garbage {\an1}we've been seeing the whole way.
412
00:18:05,208 --> 00:18:06,417
-BRYANT: Right. -ERIK: Yeah, yeah.
413
00:18:06,458 --> 00:18:08,208
-That is unusual. -Yeah, it is.
414
00:18:08,250 --> 00:18:10,458
ERIK: So, as we're dragging the device behind us,
415
00:18:10,500 --> 00:18:12,583
Phil noticed that there was a structure.
416
00:18:12,625 --> 00:18:14,375
Could have been something mundane.
417
00:18:14,417 --> 00:18:16,750
{\an1}Could have something to do with {\an1}the utilities on the property.
418
00:18:16,792 --> 00:18:19,583
So, for Phil's benefit,
419
00:18:19,625 --> 00:18:22,250
{\an1}-you see that roof over there? -Yes.
420
00:18:22,291 --> 00:18:25,083
{\an5}BRYANT: {\an1}Right in this grove of trees up on the left.
421
00:18:25,125 --> 00:18:26,917
ERIK: {\an1}We call it Homestead Number Two.
422
00:18:26,959 --> 00:18:28,959
PHIL: Okay, got it, got it.
423
00:18:30,375 --> 00:18:32,417
Now, uh, look at this right here.
424
00:18:32,458 --> 00:18:33,458
ERIK: Okay.
425
00:18:33,500 --> 00:18:35,709
{\an1}Whoa! I see that, I see that.
426
00:18:35,750 --> 00:18:38,041
{\an1}How do you interpret that... that feature?
427
00:18:38,083 --> 00:18:40,291
{\an5}PHIL: Well, it looks like a dome feature.
428
00:18:40,333 --> 00:18:43,792
{\an5}ERIK: Then we see another interesting anomaly
429
00:18:43,834 --> 00:18:45,667
in the Homestead Two area,
430
00:18:45,709 --> 00:18:48,834
and we don't know {\an1}what the origin of those...
431
00:18:48,875 --> 00:18:51,000
structures really is.
432
00:18:51,041 --> 00:18:52,041
Look.
433
00:18:52,083 --> 00:18:53,458
Oh, wow!
434
00:18:53,500 --> 00:18:56,041
-What-what does this? -I cannot tell you
435
00:18:56,083 --> 00:18:58,250
what's causing that. Man, it could be...
436
00:18:58,291 --> 00:19:01,417
{\an1}it could be something buried, you know, metal.
437
00:19:01,458 --> 00:19:03,250
-Really? -Yes.
438
00:19:09,917 --> 00:19:13,125
{\an8}PHIL: All right, {\an7}let's halt the vehicle. I...
439
00:19:13,166 --> 00:19:15,208
-Another dome, you think? -Another dome.
440
00:19:15,250 --> 00:19:16,709
All right.
441
00:19:16,750 --> 00:19:18,709
{\an7}PHIL: I'm looking laterally {\an8}in the data,
442
00:19:18,750 --> 00:19:20,917
{\an8}-Uh-huh. {\an7}-and it's been fairly consistent
443
00:19:20,959 --> 00:19:22,959
{\an8}-through this whole area, {\an8}-Uh-huh.
444
00:19:23,000 --> 00:19:25,208
{\an7}except we've seen features at...
445
00:19:25,250 --> 00:19:27,333
{\an8}several different depths.
446
00:19:27,375 --> 00:19:28,792
{\an7}But you say it could just be
447
00:19:28,834 --> 00:19:30,208
{\an8}-a geological feature? {\an8}-It could be,
448
00:19:30,250 --> 00:19:32,208
{\an8}but it-it... {\an7}doesn't look like it to me.
449
00:19:32,250 --> 00:19:34,709
It looks anomalous.
450
00:19:34,750 --> 00:19:36,458
We'll see if we can duplicate that
451
00:19:36,500 --> 00:19:38,333
-on the way back. -Okay.
452
00:19:38,375 --> 00:19:39,750
It'll be interesting to have a look
453
00:19:39,792 --> 00:19:41,083
-at all of these. -Sure. Okay.
454
00:19:41,125 --> 00:19:43,000
{\an1}-Every one of the patterns. -Okay.
455
00:19:43,041 --> 00:19:45,917
You want to reshoot it all the way back?
456
00:19:45,959 --> 00:19:48,625
{\an5}-Right. Just to-to verify what we've seen. -Okay.
457
00:19:48,667 --> 00:19:52,458
{\an7}You know, I was really excited {\an7}just to get any data at all.
458
00:19:52,500 --> 00:19:54,291
{\an1}You know, when we're talking about the possibility
459
00:19:54,333 --> 00:19:56,125
of metal structure, {\an1}of course it's very exciting.
460
00:19:56,166 --> 00:19:58,583
But we need to go back in the other direction
461
00:19:58,625 --> 00:20:00,875
to verify that we're not just seeing some artifact
462
00:20:00,917 --> 00:20:02,709
but that what we're seeing is real.
463
00:20:04,709 --> 00:20:08,291
{\an5}BRYANT: So, right here is one of the domes we measured.
464
00:20:08,333 --> 00:20:10,583
-Oh, yeah. -It's not quite as evident
465
00:20:10,625 --> 00:20:12,458
as it was.
466
00:20:13,959 --> 00:20:16,500
But you can sure see it.
467
00:20:16,542 --> 00:20:18,333
And we had another one of those up here, too.
468
00:20:18,375 --> 00:20:19,375
ERIK: That's right.
469
00:20:19,417 --> 00:20:22,333
-Okay. -Uh... yeah.
470
00:20:22,375 --> 00:20:23,750
{\an7}-There it comes. There it is. {\an8}-You seeing it?
471
00:20:23,792 --> 00:20:25,875
{\an8}There it is. Oh, my gosh.
472
00:20:25,917 --> 00:20:27,875
{\an5}-That-that's exactly what we saw before. -Okay.
473
00:20:27,917 --> 00:20:29,166
-Perfect. -Very distinct.
474
00:20:29,208 --> 00:20:30,667
ERIK: It's always exciting
475
00:20:30,709 --> 00:20:32,834
{\an1}when you have anomalous data {\an1}and you go back and take it
476
00:20:32,875 --> 00:20:35,041
a second time, {\an1}and you get the same thing.
477
00:20:35,083 --> 00:20:37,083
And that's exactly what we've seen.
478
00:20:37,125 --> 00:20:41,166
{\an1}We're seeing very interesting multilayer structures
479
00:20:41,208 --> 00:20:44,583
at depths of anywhere from {\an1}eight feet below the surface
480
00:20:44,625 --> 00:20:47,875
to 24, 25 feet below the surface.
481
00:20:48,875 --> 00:20:51,417
PHIL: All right.
482
00:20:51,458 --> 00:20:54,208
Stop right here, Erik.
483
00:20:54,250 --> 00:20:55,542
(engine shuts off)
484
00:20:55,583 --> 00:20:57,750
-Interesting. -Oh, wow.
485
00:20:59,583 --> 00:21:02,250
{\an5}-I can see a couple {\an1}of parallel features right here. -Uh-huh.
486
00:21:02,291 --> 00:21:04,542
{\an1}We saw this in both directions.
487
00:21:04,583 --> 00:21:07,208
{\an1}I-I mean, you may be seeing the top and the base
488
00:21:07,250 --> 00:21:08,709
of a possible tunnel.
489
00:21:08,750 --> 00:21:11,125
{\an1}And it opens up as you move this direction.
490
00:21:11,166 --> 00:21:15,542
{\an1}So, we're looking at something quite large in here.
491
00:21:15,583 --> 00:21:18,750
{\an4}- Oh, wow. I hate to point it {\an1}out, but, you know, this is exactly
492
00:21:18,792 --> 00:21:20,375
where we were when we had the difficulty
493
00:21:20,417 --> 00:21:22,250
with the drone survey.
494
00:21:22,291 --> 00:21:23,792
{\an8}-So, let's get going. {\an8}-BRYANT: Yeah.
495
00:21:23,834 --> 00:21:26,125
{\an8}ERIK: This is an area {\an8}where we did try
496
00:21:26,166 --> 00:21:27,291
{\an8}drone thermography {\an8}measurements,
497
00:21:27,333 --> 00:21:29,125
{\an8}but we were not successful,
498
00:21:29,166 --> 00:21:32,166
{\an8}due to some mysterious {\an7}electromagnetic interference.
499
00:21:32,208 --> 00:21:34,542
DERRICK: No connection.
500
00:21:34,583 --> 00:21:38,166
We are in one of the most interesting
501
00:21:38,208 --> 00:21:41,166
and notorious regions of the ranch.
502
00:21:41,208 --> 00:21:42,750
This is Homestead Two.
503
00:21:42,792 --> 00:21:44,542
I'm wondering if this is coincidence.
504
00:21:44,583 --> 00:21:45,625
Clear as mud, Erik.
505
00:21:45,667 --> 00:21:47,417
It's what this place is.
506
00:21:52,500 --> 00:21:54,458
{\an8}ZACHARY: {\an8}Here we go.
507
00:21:54,500 --> 00:21:56,041
{\an8}So, this is the raw data
508
00:21:56,083 --> 00:21:58,041
{\an8}plotted over, you know, {\an8}a 2-D grid.
509
00:21:58,083 --> 00:21:59,917
{\an8}So, blues are going to be {\an8}more conductive,
510
00:21:59,959 --> 00:22:01,834
{\an8}and reds are going to be {\an8}more resistive.
511
00:22:01,875 --> 00:22:03,709
{\an8}TRAVIS: More resistive {\an8}might mean a hole.
512
00:22:03,750 --> 00:22:05,166
{\an8}ZACHARY: {\an8}Yep.
513
00:22:05,208 --> 00:22:08,208
{\an7}-So, that-that could be a cave? {\an8}-Potentially.
514
00:22:08,250 --> 00:22:10,750
We really need to post-process it,
515
00:22:10,792 --> 00:22:12,125
um, and run it through an inversion
516
00:22:12,166 --> 00:22:13,792
so that we can really say what's going on.
517
00:22:13,834 --> 00:22:15,083
TRAVIS: {\an1}Once you do the post-processing,
518
00:22:15,125 --> 00:22:16,709
{\an1}-then we'll know more about it. -Yep.
519
00:22:16,750 --> 00:22:19,542
ERIK (over radio): Hey, Tom, you copy?
520
00:22:19,583 --> 00:22:21,667
THOMAS: Yeah, go ahead.
521
00:22:21,709 --> 00:22:24,166
{\an5}ERIK: Hey, we're getting some really interesting readings
522
00:22:24,208 --> 00:22:26,208
out here at Homestead Two.
523
00:22:26,250 --> 00:22:27,875
I'd like to ask you to just drop whatever you're doing
524
00:22:27,917 --> 00:22:29,792
and bring some {\an1}of Phil's extra gear out here
525
00:22:29,834 --> 00:22:32,166
so we can take a closer look at it.
526
00:22:32,208 --> 00:22:33,959
THOMAS: Okay, I'll grab the guys,
527
00:22:34,000 --> 00:22:36,583
{\an1}and we'll grab the equipment and head that way.
528
00:22:36,625 --> 00:22:38,750
ERIK: Copy.
529
00:22:38,792 --> 00:22:39,959
{\an5}- Okay, just leave this, {\an5}and we'll just head over? - Yeah, we'll... I'll pack this in,
530
00:22:40,000 --> 00:22:41,375
{\an1}and you guys can head over now.
531
00:22:42,500 --> 00:22:44,041
I don't know, man.
532
00:22:44,083 --> 00:22:45,917
-It-it's... -Interesting area.
533
00:22:45,959 --> 00:22:47,417
{\an1}It's too much of a coincidence all the time.
534
00:22:47,458 --> 00:22:48,500
Mm-hmm.
535
00:22:48,542 --> 00:22:50,041
{\an8}BRYANT: {\an8}There they are.
536
00:22:50,083 --> 00:22:51,709
{\an8}That was quick.
537
00:22:53,542 --> 00:22:54,667
See what they got.
538
00:22:56,083 --> 00:22:58,166
-What's up, fellas? -TRAVIS: Hey.
539
00:22:58,208 --> 00:22:59,834
BRYANT: {\an1}You said if you come across
540
00:22:59,875 --> 00:23:01,500
anything in-interesting or intriguing,
541
00:23:01,542 --> 00:23:03,208
we should call you.
542
00:23:03,250 --> 00:23:05,291
-Yeah? You find something? {\an1}-So, that's what we did, plus...
543
00:23:05,333 --> 00:23:07,834
{\an1}We-we found some dome features,
544
00:23:07,875 --> 00:23:10,542
{\an1}anywhere from eight to 25 feet,
545
00:23:10,583 --> 00:23:13,500
that are almost parallel {\an1}with this structure over here.
546
00:23:13,542 --> 00:23:16,250
{\an8}When you say "dome," {\an7}are you talking a formation
547
00:23:16,291 --> 00:23:18,792
{\an8}-or an opening or what? {\an8}-Yes, like a... like a...
548
00:23:18,834 --> 00:23:20,583
It almost looked as though there was
549
00:23:20,625 --> 00:23:23,500
{\an1}the top of the... of a tunnel and the base of a tunnel.
550
00:23:23,542 --> 00:23:26,417
-Oh, a tunnel? -Yes, and it's interesting
551
00:23:26,458 --> 00:23:28,875
that it's parallel to this {\an1}structure right here, as well.
552
00:23:28,917 --> 00:23:30,667
{\an1}That's why we called you guys.
553
00:23:30,709 --> 00:23:33,291
{\an1}We wanted you over here and... {\an1}and to check this area out.
554
00:23:33,333 --> 00:23:35,166
See if we can see any correlation.
555
00:23:35,208 --> 00:23:37,000
Does it appear jagged, or does it appear smooth?
556
00:23:37,041 --> 00:23:38,000
PHIL: It's smooth.
557
00:23:38,041 --> 00:23:39,583
{\an1}So... so, we're-we're seeing
558
00:23:39,625 --> 00:23:42,250
{\an1}almost a domal-type feature, and then it pinches
559
00:23:42,291 --> 00:23:44,125
into a... almost a point.
560
00:23:45,291 --> 00:23:46,458
BRYANT: It looks more like
561
00:23:46,500 --> 00:23:48,166
{\an1}a hollow opening than anything.
562
00:23:48,208 --> 00:23:50,834
{\an1}What I would suggest is to... is to scan this area
563
00:23:50,875 --> 00:23:52,125
with the wide range
564
00:23:52,166 --> 00:23:53,583
and see if we see any correlation
565
00:23:53,625 --> 00:23:55,083
{\an1}between the... between this area
566
00:23:55,125 --> 00:23:56,875
-and that area. -TRAVIS: Yeah.
567
00:23:56,917 --> 00:23:58,875
{\an1}Well, let's get the equipment {\an1}out and let's do it, right?
568
00:23:58,917 --> 00:24:01,000
{\an5}-Grab the wheels. -You got it? -I got it.
569
00:24:01,041 --> 00:24:02,583
SEGALA: For a very long time,
570
00:24:02,625 --> 00:24:04,333
there's been a lot of strange things
571
00:24:04,375 --> 00:24:05,792
going on at Homestead Two.
572
00:24:05,834 --> 00:24:08,375
{\an8}And what I want to do {\an8}is dig around the place
573
00:24:08,417 --> 00:24:10,041
{\an8}because I believe {\an8}there's a possibility
574
00:24:10,083 --> 00:24:12,000
{\an7}that there's something unknown
575
00:24:12,041 --> 00:24:14,500
{\an8}under the ground {\an7}that seems to be seeping up
576
00:24:14,542 --> 00:24:15,959
{\an8}or causing different...
577
00:24:16,000 --> 00:24:18,125
{\an8}causing different, uh, {\an8}phenomena to happen.
578
00:24:18,166 --> 00:24:20,458
-So, let's turn it on. -SEGALA: But there's been
579
00:24:20,500 --> 00:24:23,125
a lot of pushback on digging on the property.
580
00:24:23,166 --> 00:24:25,667
So, of course, with GPR, that gives us
581
00:24:25,709 --> 00:24:28,583
an idea of what might be under there
582
00:24:28,625 --> 00:24:30,166
without really disturbing the ground
583
00:24:30,208 --> 00:24:32,917
and bringing up anything {\an1}that might be toxic underneath.
584
00:24:32,959 --> 00:24:34,750
PHIL: Okay, we're ready.
585
00:24:34,792 --> 00:24:36,041
BRYANT: Hey, Phil?
586
00:24:36,083 --> 00:24:37,792
Sorry to interrupt you, but, I mean, I know
587
00:24:37,834 --> 00:24:39,625
we want to get up on the mesa and do that.
588
00:24:39,667 --> 00:24:41,208
I mean, we're getting late in the day,
589
00:24:41,250 --> 00:24:43,291
and I want to make sure {\an1}that we utilize all the time
590
00:24:43,333 --> 00:24:46,250
{\an1}we have with you gentlemen. {\an1}Can we split up teams here?
591
00:24:46,291 --> 00:24:49,125
{\an4}-Like, Zach go with one of us {\an1}and you go with one group? -Absolutely.
592
00:24:49,166 --> 00:24:51,125
{\an5}-Okay. -Yeah, Phil, why don't you go up to the mesa?
593
00:24:51,166 --> 00:24:52,542
-Sounds good. -You guys okay with that?
594
00:24:52,583 --> 00:24:53,917
{\an1}-Yeah, I'm good with that... -All right.
595
00:24:53,959 --> 00:24:55,417
...'cause I want to see what you guys have
596
00:24:55,458 --> 00:24:56,917
-already seen here, so... -That makes sense.
597
00:24:56,959 --> 00:24:58,917
{\an5}-Let's take it and... and get it going. -All right.
598
00:24:58,959 --> 00:25:01,542
{\an5}TRAVIS: {\an1}Now that the wide-range system has been recharged,
599
00:25:01,583 --> 00:25:05,208
{\an1}Jim, Zach and I are going to {\an1}run GPR scans at Homestead Two.
600
00:25:05,250 --> 00:25:08,375
{\an1}That's where a lot of very weird {\an1}phenomena have been reported.
601
00:25:08,417 --> 00:25:10,667
And while we're doing that,
602
00:25:10,709 --> 00:25:12,625
the rest of the guys are going to run
603
00:25:12,667 --> 00:25:14,500
some scans up on top of the mesa.
604
00:25:14,542 --> 00:25:16,250
BRYANT: Erik loves this mesa.
605
00:25:16,291 --> 00:25:17,417
ERIK: I do, I guess.
606
00:25:17,458 --> 00:25:19,125
Once I get to the top.
607
00:25:22,750 --> 00:25:24,166
TRAVIS: Well, so, guys,
608
00:25:24,208 --> 00:25:26,000
what I think is, {\an1}if you can get right there,
609
00:25:26,041 --> 00:25:27,750
kind of hug the tree line and go due south
610
00:25:27,792 --> 00:25:30,417
toward that dead tree...
611
00:25:30,458 --> 00:25:32,875
I think we can go through over here.
612
00:25:35,625 --> 00:25:37,208
Hug this bush right here the best you can.
613
00:25:37,250 --> 00:25:40,166
The ground-penetrating radar device we're using
614
00:25:40,208 --> 00:25:42,500
{\an1}was more mobile, so we started {\an1}pushing it through the woods
615
00:25:42,542 --> 00:25:44,041
and around the homestead.
616
00:25:44,083 --> 00:25:47,458
Just kind of use the house as a guide for the line.
617
00:25:47,500 --> 00:25:51,041
And that allows us to do {\an1}a much deeper investigation.
618
00:25:51,083 --> 00:25:53,667
{\an1}That's probably far enough.
619
00:25:53,709 --> 00:25:55,709
{\an5}-Yeah. -Did you see anything on that run?
620
00:25:55,750 --> 00:25:57,291
ZACH: Uh, let me check.
621
00:25:57,333 --> 00:25:59,166
Oh, holy... Look at this.
622
00:25:59,208 --> 00:26:00,792
ZACH: Oh, wow.
623
00:26:00,834 --> 00:26:02,083
SEGURA: There's this big...
624
00:26:04,291 --> 00:26:05,583
Oh, wow.
625
00:26:05,625 --> 00:26:08,000
That's crazy.
626
00:26:10,875 --> 00:26:12,041
{\an8}TRAVIS: Did you see {\an8}anything on that run?
627
00:26:12,083 --> 00:26:13,750
{\an8}ZACH: {\an8}Uh, let me check.
628
00:26:13,792 --> 00:26:16,000
{\an1}-Oh, holy... Look at this. See? -Oh, wow.
629
00:26:16,041 --> 00:26:17,917
{\an8}TRAVIS: While conducting {\an8}a ground-penetrating
630
00:26:17,959 --> 00:26:19,917
{\an8}radar test here {\an8}at Homestead Two,
631
00:26:19,959 --> 00:26:23,250
{\an7}Jim, Zach and I have just found {\an7}more evidence of some kind
632
00:26:23,291 --> 00:26:26,917
{\an7}of large object or structure {\an7}buried several feet underground.
633
00:26:26,959 --> 00:26:29,542
{\an5}SEGALA: So, there's this big anomaly here.
634
00:26:29,583 --> 00:26:31,083
{\an8}-Oh, wow. {\an8}-That's maybe
635
00:26:31,125 --> 00:26:33,083
{\an8}-at five feet, four feet? {\an8}-Yeah, it's...
636
00:26:33,125 --> 00:26:34,709
{\an8}TRAVIS: So, this is {\an8}the structure, right?
637
00:26:34,750 --> 00:26:35,917
{\an1}But look there, right there.
638
00:26:35,959 --> 00:26:37,083
It's like a-an entrance
639
00:26:37,125 --> 00:26:39,458
{\an1}or a pipe or something going up.
640
00:26:39,500 --> 00:26:41,166
SEGALA: It's on the same line
641
00:26:41,208 --> 00:26:43,000
as the well.
642
00:26:43,041 --> 00:26:45,583
{\an5}TRAVIS: And who's to say it's really a well?
643
00:26:45,625 --> 00:26:47,917
Heck, it could be a tunnel entrance, for all we know.
644
00:26:47,959 --> 00:26:49,959
I'd like to know what's in this thing.
645
00:26:50,000 --> 00:26:51,333
Don't lift it up.
646
00:26:51,375 --> 00:26:53,834
-Why not? -Because the incident
647
00:26:53,875 --> 00:26:56,959
{\an1}that happened with Brandon Fugal was right here.
648
00:26:57,000 --> 00:26:59,291
There was this guy that came in with him.
649
00:26:59,333 --> 00:27:02,750
{\an1}He lifted this up, and that's when he went catatonic.
650
00:27:05,166 --> 00:27:06,500
{\an8}BRANDON: {\an8}Several years ago,
651
00:27:06,542 --> 00:27:09,458
{\an8}we were escorting {\an8}some visitors on the site,
652
00:27:09,500 --> 00:27:11,750
{\an8}and when we entered {\an8}the old homestead area,
653
00:27:11,792 --> 00:27:14,041
{\an7}we all piled out of the UTV
654
00:27:14,083 --> 00:27:17,959
{\an7}to circle around the front {\an7}of one of the old homesteads.
655
00:27:18,000 --> 00:27:21,959
{\an1}And I looked around and found
656
00:27:22,000 --> 00:27:24,166
that one of the visitors was absent.
657
00:27:24,208 --> 00:27:27,208
As I circled around {\an1}the back end of the homestead,
658
00:27:27,250 --> 00:27:29,917
I saw this person
659
00:27:29,959 --> 00:27:33,667
fully upright with his eyes closed.
660
00:27:33,709 --> 00:27:36,417
-Hey! -And as I yelled his name
661
00:27:36,458 --> 00:27:38,458
{\an1}to somehow get his attention
662
00:27:38,500 --> 00:27:41,208
and see what was happening, his eyes fluttered open.
663
00:27:41,250 --> 00:27:43,500
He says, "Well, that was strange."
664
00:27:43,542 --> 00:27:45,125
I said, "Well, what do you mean?"
665
00:27:45,166 --> 00:27:49,250
He says, "I was paralyzed and then went to sleep.
666
00:27:49,291 --> 00:27:52,250
How long have I been out?"
667
00:27:52,291 --> 00:27:54,041
And I said, "Well, it's-it's probably
668
00:27:54,083 --> 00:27:55,959
been about ten minutes."
669
00:27:56,000 --> 00:27:58,000
He was shocked.
670
00:28:06,500 --> 00:28:08,500
-And he did what now, Jim? -He lifted it up.
671
00:28:08,542 --> 00:28:11,542
But I think, before you open that up
672
00:28:11,583 --> 00:28:15,291
or do anything like that, I would definitely...
673
00:28:15,333 --> 00:28:16,709
Or maybe not.
674
00:28:16,750 --> 00:28:18,750
TRAVIS: What the crap is that?
675
00:28:21,417 --> 00:28:23,166
{\an1}It's filled with something.
676
00:28:23,208 --> 00:28:25,542
{\an1}All right, well, look, if you {\an1}want to look down in there.
677
00:28:25,583 --> 00:28:27,250
It's just filled with crappy water.
678
00:28:27,291 --> 00:28:29,792
{\an1}I mean, muddy water or whatever. Maybe it's a septic tank.
679
00:28:29,834 --> 00:28:33,250
SEGALA: Seriously polluted.
680
00:28:33,291 --> 00:28:35,291
TRAVIS: Well, it looks pretty bad.
681
00:28:45,166 --> 00:28:47,125
It stinks, though. Ooh!
682
00:28:47,166 --> 00:28:49,500
{\an1}So, there's something in there.
683
00:28:53,417 --> 00:28:56,917
You know, I don't know {\an1}if I want to say it or not,
684
00:28:56,959 --> 00:28:58,750
but I-I feel like a, I don't know,
685
00:28:58,792 --> 00:29:01,083
I've got a little bit of a {\an1}headache or something happening.
686
00:29:01,125 --> 00:29:03,667
{\an8}So, why-why don't we {\an8}get out of here?
687
00:29:03,709 --> 00:29:05,041
{\an8}Maybe the smell, {\an8}maybe some mildew
688
00:29:05,083 --> 00:29:06,333
{\an8}or mold or something here.
689
00:29:06,375 --> 00:29:08,208
So, let's, uh, I say let's get back out
690
00:29:08,250 --> 00:29:09,917
to the road {\an1}where there's more air flow.
691
00:29:12,583 --> 00:29:16,166
{\an1}I started getting this headache and this nausea feeling.
692
00:29:16,208 --> 00:29:18,583
I wasn't sure what it was, but I realized, you know,
693
00:29:18,625 --> 00:29:20,375
I've got this dosimeter in my pocket.
694
00:29:20,417 --> 00:29:23,000
{\an1}All right, well, maybe we should
695
00:29:23,041 --> 00:29:25,166
check our dosimeters or whatever.
696
00:29:25,208 --> 00:29:26,542
Yeah.
697
00:29:28,208 --> 00:29:30,041
(beeping)
698
00:29:30,083 --> 00:29:32,041
TRAVIS: Holy... Mine's beeping.
699
00:29:32,083 --> 00:29:33,375
{\an1}Your max dose rate's about 120?
700
00:29:33,417 --> 00:29:34,792
Yeah, its 120-something.
701
00:29:34,834 --> 00:29:36,917
That's pretty high. That's pretty high.
702
00:29:36,959 --> 00:29:39,500
TRAVIS: This is really scary.
703
00:29:39,542 --> 00:29:41,375
My dosimeter device, which measures exposure
704
00:29:41,417 --> 00:29:44,917
to ionizing radiation, {\an1}is showing that I just got hit
705
00:29:44,959 --> 00:29:47,000
{\an1}with 120 millirads per second.
706
00:29:47,041 --> 00:29:48,583
That's like getting 20,000
707
00:29:48,625 --> 00:29:50,959
full-body X-ray scans at an airport,
708
00:29:51,000 --> 00:29:52,583
which is five times more
709
00:29:52,625 --> 00:29:54,709
than the legal limit allows in a year.
710
00:29:54,750 --> 00:29:56,917
So, I just accumulated a semi-dangerous dose.
711
00:29:56,959 --> 00:29:59,583
So, we're reading {\an1}the exact same amount of rate,
712
00:29:59,625 --> 00:30:02,542
{\an1}but this thing accumulated more.
713
00:30:02,583 --> 00:30:04,709
Well, and I was the one that stood over
714
00:30:04,750 --> 00:30:07,291
{\an1}-that hole when we opened it up. -Yep.
715
00:30:07,333 --> 00:30:10,291
{\an5}TRAVIS: We were just exposed to ionizing radiation.
716
00:30:10,333 --> 00:30:12,000
-Wow! {\an1}-Now, I got to tell you that
717
00:30:12,041 --> 00:30:13,917
-it's not a lethal dose. -It's not a lethal dose.
718
00:30:13,959 --> 00:30:15,750
{\an1}But it's an accumulated dose that you're not gonna see
719
00:30:15,792 --> 00:30:17,500
{\an1}out in the middle of nowhere, guaranteed.
720
00:30:17,542 --> 00:30:19,250
{\an1}Yep. And, well, and it's enough that they're saying,
721
00:30:19,291 --> 00:30:20,875
"Hey, it's dangerous. Get out of that place
722
00:30:20,917 --> 00:30:22,458
{\an1}-and don't say in that place" -Yeah.
723
00:30:22,500 --> 00:30:26,792
{\an1}So we need to stop the GPR. Let's load the stuff up.
724
00:30:26,834 --> 00:30:28,125
-All right. -Cool.
725
00:30:30,750 --> 00:30:33,458
{\an5}TRAVIS: {\an1}What happened at Homestead Two really shook me up.
726
00:30:33,500 --> 00:30:36,458
And then, the next day, I noticed weird red marks
727
00:30:36,500 --> 00:30:38,083
on my hand and my head.
728
00:30:38,125 --> 00:30:40,709
I went to my doctor to get checked out,
729
00:30:40,750 --> 00:30:43,875
and he confirmed they were radiation burns.
730
00:30:43,917 --> 00:30:46,667
I'm okay now, {\an1}but I'm really anxious to get
731
00:30:46,709 --> 00:30:49,583
to the final results {\an1}of our GPR scans to find out
732
00:30:49,625 --> 00:30:52,667
if it's something {\an1}in the ground that caused this.
733
00:30:59,875 --> 00:31:03,208
{\an8}PHIL: Okay, we're here to, {\an8}uh, discuss the processing
734
00:31:03,250 --> 00:31:06,208
{\an8}of the GPR data that {\an7}we collected out in the field.
735
00:31:06,250 --> 00:31:08,333
{\an8}Uh, I took a look {\an8}at all the data,
736
00:31:08,375 --> 00:31:11,834
{\an7}and I'm really gonna concentrate {\an7}in and around Homestead Two.
737
00:31:11,875 --> 00:31:17,375
{\an7}So, that's what we're gonna be {\an7}looking at on the screen today. {\an7}- Okay. Well, let's see it.
738
00:31:17,417 --> 00:31:20,083
{\an1}All right, let's take a look at the data here.
739
00:31:20,125 --> 00:31:22,417
{\an1}See, here's where we started {\an1}again from west going east.
740
00:31:22,458 --> 00:31:24,458
-TRAVIS: Right. -It's just noisy data.
741
00:31:24,500 --> 00:31:28,166
And now were seeing {\an1}these features in more detail.
742
00:31:28,208 --> 00:31:30,625
-TRAVIS: Oh, wow! -ERIK: Yeah, yeah, yeah.
743
00:31:30,667 --> 00:31:33,291
{\an1}Basically, looks like para... upside down parabolas.
744
00:31:33,333 --> 00:31:34,875
Right, they're-they're hyperbolas.
745
00:31:34,917 --> 00:31:39,333
{\an1}Now, what creates the hyperbolas are objects.
746
00:31:39,375 --> 00:31:41,792
{\an1}A lot of things can cause those.
747
00:31:41,834 --> 00:31:45,375
Uh, boulders can cause those types of features.
748
00:31:45,417 --> 00:31:48,041
{\an8}Tunneling can cause {\an8}that type of feature.
749
00:31:48,083 --> 00:31:50,125
TRAVIS: Gosh, it goes all the way as far down
750
00:31:50,166 --> 00:31:51,375
-as 25, 30 feet. -Right.
751
00:31:51,417 --> 00:31:53,125
{\an1}Well, it's clearly an anomaly.
752
00:31:53,166 --> 00:31:54,792
Yes.
753
00:31:54,834 --> 00:31:56,625
I'll tell you what it looks like to me.
754
00:31:58,208 --> 00:31:59,667
Look at this.
755
00:31:59,709 --> 00:32:01,041
Here's the top point.
756
00:32:01,083 --> 00:32:02,208
Right there. Right?
757
00:32:02,250 --> 00:32:03,208
Here's another point.
758
00:32:03,250 --> 00:32:04,959
There's one here.
759
00:32:05,000 --> 00:32:07,667
{\an1}And then you could say maybe {\an1}it kind of starts over here.
760
00:32:07,709 --> 00:32:09,667
And so there's your connecting the dots.
761
00:32:09,709 --> 00:32:11,542
Connect all these peaks,
762
00:32:11,583 --> 00:32:13,834
and it looks to me {\an1}like you got a football shape.
763
00:32:13,875 --> 00:32:15,375
Well, give me a pen, then.
764
00:32:15,417 --> 00:32:16,917
All right. Actually, tear me off
765
00:32:16,959 --> 00:32:18,667
about three more pieces of paper.
766
00:32:18,709 --> 00:32:21,750
So, there's the spot for the peak,
767
00:32:21,792 --> 00:32:25,166
probably here, {\an1}and down here on the bottom.
768
00:32:25,208 --> 00:32:27,959
{\an1}It's, like, here, here, here.
769
00:32:28,000 --> 00:32:29,917
There's another one kind of down here, lower.
770
00:32:29,959 --> 00:32:31,917
So now let's lay it on the table,
771
00:32:31,959 --> 00:32:34,083
and we'll draw... {\an1}we're gonna connect the dots.
772
00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:38,959
All right. So, guys, if we look,
773
00:32:39,000 --> 00:32:41,583
{\an1}there's something that has...
774
00:32:41,625 --> 00:32:44,458
surface points.
775
00:32:44,500 --> 00:32:47,041
Something...
776
00:32:47,083 --> 00:32:48,834
along those lines.
777
00:32:49,875 --> 00:32:51,250
BRYANT: Wow.
778
00:32:51,291 --> 00:32:52,667
TRAVIS: I marked the high
779
00:32:52,709 --> 00:32:54,709
and the low points of the parabolas
780
00:32:54,750 --> 00:32:56,709
that we saw on the screen.
781
00:32:56,750 --> 00:32:58,959
And once I connected all the dots,
782
00:32:59,000 --> 00:33:01,583
the size and shape of {\an1}the object we found underground
783
00:33:01,625 --> 00:33:04,333
became clear-- {\an1}it looked like a giant football
784
00:33:04,375 --> 00:33:06,041
or a saucer.
785
00:33:06,083 --> 00:33:08,959
-I like the shape of it. -BRYANT: And...
786
00:33:09,000 --> 00:33:10,959
it's almost at the start of Homestead Two
787
00:33:11,000 --> 00:33:12,709
{\an1}to the end of Homestead Two.
788
00:33:12,750 --> 00:33:15,542
This thing is...
789
00:33:15,583 --> 00:33:17,333
a thousand feet long.
790
00:33:20,834 --> 00:33:23,583
Wow. I wasn't expecting to see that today.
791
00:33:29,083 --> 00:33:32,291
{\an7}TRAVIS: What this looks like {\an8}is a two-story facility.
792
00:33:32,333 --> 00:33:34,542
This thing is...
793
00:33:34,583 --> 00:33:36,000
a thousand feet long.
794
00:33:36,041 --> 00:33:37,291
That's huge.
795
00:33:37,333 --> 00:33:38,750
THOMAS: That's significant.
796
00:33:38,792 --> 00:33:40,542
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an7}We have a thousand-foot-long,
797
00:33:40,583 --> 00:33:42,375
{\an8}oval-shaped object
798
00:33:42,417 --> 00:33:44,875
{\an8}that appears to be buried {\an7}underground at Homestead Two.
799
00:33:44,917 --> 00:33:47,166
{\an7}Now, this is the same place
800
00:33:47,208 --> 00:33:48,875
{\an8}where a lot {\an8}of bizarre happenings
801
00:33:48,917 --> 00:33:51,792
{\an8}and even UFO sightings have {\an7}been reported over the years.
802
00:33:51,834 --> 00:33:54,125
{\an7}So the question obviously is:
803
00:33:54,166 --> 00:33:55,792
{\an8}Are they related?
804
00:33:55,834 --> 00:33:57,375
Right here...
805
00:33:57,417 --> 00:34:00,125
that's "X" marks the spot.
806
00:34:00,166 --> 00:34:02,250
{\an1}That's-that's, like, 15 feet {\an1}below the surface or something.
807
00:34:02,291 --> 00:34:04,875
{\an8}And we drill into that,
808
00:34:04,917 --> 00:34:08,875
{\an7}and we'll know, is it rock, {\an7}is it metal, is it... whatever.
809
00:34:08,917 --> 00:34:11,875
{\an8}And so we got to... {\an8}we got to dig there.
810
00:34:11,917 --> 00:34:13,834
{\an8}Or drill, at least, {\an8}take a core sample.
811
00:34:13,875 --> 00:34:16,333
{\an7}Well, you're gonna have to get {\an7}Brandon to sign off on that.
812
00:34:16,375 --> 00:34:19,333
{\an7}-Well, I-I understand that. {\an7}-I-I always get painted as...
813
00:34:19,375 --> 00:34:21,583
{\an8}the guy that's {\an8}the anti-digging guy,
814
00:34:21,625 --> 00:34:23,917
{\an8}and look, I'm interested {\an8}to know what's there, too,
815
00:34:23,959 --> 00:34:25,500
{\an8}but at the end of the day,
816
00:34:25,542 --> 00:34:27,709
{\an8}that was one of Brandon's {\an8}big mandates to me.
817
00:34:29,709 --> 00:34:32,208
{\an5}BRYANT: Looking at that interesting shape we found,
818
00:34:32,250 --> 00:34:34,208
the knee-jerk reaction is we need to dig
819
00:34:34,250 --> 00:34:35,709
and find out what that thing is.
820
00:34:35,750 --> 00:34:37,583
It could be amazing or whatever.
821
00:34:37,625 --> 00:34:40,000
My first reaction is, "Wait a minute."
822
00:34:40,041 --> 00:34:44,125
{\an1}We have radiation in the area, {\an1}and we don't know what this is,
823
00:34:44,166 --> 00:34:46,917
and you pile that on top {\an1}of the whole "don't dig" lore
824
00:34:46,959 --> 00:34:48,291
about this place.
825
00:34:48,333 --> 00:34:50,500
I mean, Thomas had a major injury
826
00:34:50,542 --> 00:34:52,792
that almost took his life.
827
00:34:52,834 --> 00:34:55,250
Travis was exposed to radiation.
828
00:34:55,291 --> 00:34:57,792
The last thing I'm gonna do is just say, "Hey, yeah,
829
00:34:57,834 --> 00:34:59,875
"let's head out there {\an1}and start digging up the road
830
00:34:59,917 --> 00:35:01,291
{\an1}and see what's down there."
831
00:35:01,333 --> 00:35:04,375
I'm extremely sensitive {\an1}to what's going on right now,
832
00:35:04,417 --> 00:35:06,792
{\an1}between what happened to you the other night
833
00:35:06,834 --> 00:35:08,333
{\an1}when we were camping again,
834
00:35:08,375 --> 00:35:10,333
what Travis experienced.
835
00:35:10,375 --> 00:35:13,959
{\an1}Certainly, I don't see the data the same way you do.
836
00:35:14,000 --> 00:35:16,125
I'd like to see what your opinion is.
837
00:35:16,166 --> 00:35:17,959
{\an5}-I think there's... -You're the professional in this.
838
00:35:18,000 --> 00:35:20,375
{\an1}-Right. I think, from what... {\an1}-I don't have an opinion, Jim?
839
00:35:20,417 --> 00:35:23,750
{\an8}-Is that what this is? {\an8}-PHIL: I think,
840
00:35:23,792 --> 00:35:26,583
{\an8}from what I see here, {\an7}I would absolutely see this
841
00:35:26,625 --> 00:35:29,333
{\an7}as being an anomalous area, {\an8}is what I would say.
842
00:35:29,375 --> 00:35:31,250
{\an7}Just being... When you say {\an7}"anomalous," different than
843
00:35:31,291 --> 00:35:33,250
{\an8}-the rest of the area. {\an8}-Different than the rest
844
00:35:33,291 --> 00:35:35,208
{\an8}of the area, {\an8}that we didn't see, or...
845
00:35:35,250 --> 00:35:37,750
{\an8}nine-tenths of the road {\an8}that we went down.
846
00:35:37,792 --> 00:35:40,250
Well, I think we take this to Brandon
847
00:35:40,291 --> 00:35:43,250
{\an1}and tell him the whole story, Dragon, and say...
848
00:35:43,291 --> 00:35:45,208
You guys better take it, 'cause apparently,
849
00:35:45,250 --> 00:35:47,709
because I'm not a PhD, {\an1}I don't have a (bleep) opinion
850
00:35:47,750 --> 00:35:48,959
at the table.
851
00:35:52,667 --> 00:35:54,417
{\an1}Look, I care about you guys.
852
00:35:54,458 --> 00:35:56,583
{\an1}You know, I care about you.
853
00:35:56,625 --> 00:35:58,709
{\an1}If... if I didn't like you, I would just say,
854
00:35:58,750 --> 00:36:00,709
"Fine, you know what, I'll be at the front gate.
855
00:36:00,750 --> 00:36:03,583
{\an1}You guys go dig. Just keep me {\an1}the hell away from this..."
856
00:36:03,625 --> 00:36:06,792
I'm sorry that I kind of {\an1}blew up there a little bit,
857
00:36:06,834 --> 00:36:08,792
but it's just because I'm sensitive,
858
00:36:08,834 --> 00:36:10,750
especially now...
859
00:36:10,792 --> 00:36:13,542
that all this stuff has started happening.
860
00:36:13,583 --> 00:36:16,542
And I'm sorry, {\an1}going back to your analogy,
861
00:36:16,583 --> 00:36:18,291
I don't want to poke a hornets' nest
862
00:36:18,333 --> 00:36:20,166
{\an1}that has radioactive hornets come flying out.
863
00:36:20,208 --> 00:36:22,834
{\an5}-I already been stung once by it, right? -Yeah, I know.
864
00:36:22,875 --> 00:36:26,166
{\an1}To that point, if we're going {\an1}down two feet and we're testing,
865
00:36:26,208 --> 00:36:28,959
{\an1}and two feet and we're testing, if that is the case,
866
00:36:29,000 --> 00:36:32,000
{\an5}-those levels are gonna be going up, and we can stop. -Absolutely.
867
00:36:32,041 --> 00:36:34,625
-We'll see it every time. -And if Brandon
868
00:36:34,667 --> 00:36:38,291
{\an1}looks at the data and says, {\an1}"Okay, I will sign off on this,"
869
00:36:38,333 --> 00:36:39,750
you're good with it, then, Bryant?
870
00:36:39,792 --> 00:36:41,417
{\an1}-Is that what you're saying? -He's-he's my boss.
871
00:36:41,458 --> 00:36:43,083
But I'm-I'm just trying to get a read
872
00:36:43,125 --> 00:36:44,709
{\an1}for where you are personally.
873
00:36:44,750 --> 00:36:47,667
If he signs off on it, {\an1}are you comfortable with it?
874
00:36:47,709 --> 00:36:49,291
{\an5}SEGALA: 'Cause you're ultimately responsible...
875
00:36:49,333 --> 00:36:51,333
Look, I... like I said, I just answer to him.
876
00:36:51,375 --> 00:36:53,917
{\an5}-No, but you're... -So, if that's what he wants to do, then...
877
00:36:53,959 --> 00:36:56,583
{\an5}BRYANT: You know, I had my points, {\an1}those guys had their points.
878
00:36:56,625 --> 00:36:58,333
{\an1}You know, we weren't totally in agreement,
879
00:36:58,375 --> 00:37:00,250
so it was time to get on the phone
880
00:37:00,291 --> 00:37:01,792
{\an1}and get Brandon up to speed
881
00:37:01,834 --> 00:37:04,041
with what we found {\an1}and get his take on things.
882
00:37:04,083 --> 00:37:06,875
{\an1}Zach, Phil, thank you so much for coming out.
883
00:37:06,917 --> 00:37:08,959
-These are fantastic data. -Thank y'all.
884
00:37:09,000 --> 00:37:11,041
{\an5}-Thanks, guys. -Thank you. -Appreciate it.
885
00:37:11,083 --> 00:37:12,959
TRAVIS: {\an1}All right, let's call Brandon
886
00:37:13,000 --> 00:37:15,583
and let Brandon make the decision.
887
00:37:20,041 --> 00:37:22,458
{\an8}(phone rings)
888
00:37:22,500 --> 00:37:24,834
{\an8}-Hey. {\an8}-BRYANT: Hey, Brandon.
889
00:37:24,875 --> 00:37:27,000
{\an8}It's, uh, {\an8}Bryant and Travis here.
890
00:37:27,041 --> 00:37:28,709
{\an8}Hey, guys.
891
00:37:28,750 --> 00:37:31,250
{\an8}What-what's happening {\an8}out at Skinwalker Ranch?
892
00:37:31,291 --> 00:37:34,000
{\an7}We've got interesting things, {\an8}and then we've got things
893
00:37:34,041 --> 00:37:36,792
{\an7}that... lend me to pause and...
894
00:37:36,834 --> 00:37:38,959
have me concerned.
895
00:37:39,000 --> 00:37:41,709
{\an1}And I'll let Travis explain, you know, what we found
896
00:37:41,750 --> 00:37:43,542
with-with the folks doing
897
00:37:43,583 --> 00:37:46,583
{\an1}the GPR, or ground-penetrating radar work.
898
00:37:48,083 --> 00:37:50,041
Right in front of Homestead Two...
899
00:37:50,083 --> 00:37:51,542
- Yeah.
900
00:37:51,583 --> 00:37:54,834
{\an1}there is an anomaly underground that ranges from about...
901
00:37:54,875 --> 00:37:58,500
12 or 13 feet {\an1}all the way down to 35 feet,
902
00:37:58,542 --> 00:38:00,583
and it's kind of,
903
00:38:00,625 --> 00:38:03,291
uh... I would say maybe football-shaped,
904
00:38:03,333 --> 00:38:05,834
{\an1}about a thousand-foot long.
905
00:38:06,208 --> 00:38:07,208
- Wow.
906
00:38:08,000 --> 00:38:10,417
{\an1}If I were gonna say that there's any place on the ranch
907
00:38:10,458 --> 00:38:12,208
where "X" marks the spot, it's right there
908
00:38:12,250 --> 00:38:14,792
in the middle of the road {\an1}right in front of Homestead Two.
909
00:38:14,834 --> 00:38:20,500
{\an5}- Okay. This is something {\an5}that I did not expect. - That-that leads into the not so good news.
910
00:38:20,542 --> 00:38:23,458
Travis and Dr. Segala
911
00:38:23,500 --> 00:38:26,750
were exposed to a dose
912
00:38:26,792 --> 00:38:29,875
of toxic radiation.
913
00:38:29,917 --> 00:38:31,375
- What? - Yeah.
914
00:38:31,417 --> 00:38:33,667
{\an1}Well, I mean, I'm-I'm okay, uh,
915
00:38:33,709 --> 00:38:36,041
{\an1}and I've had my doctors talk {\an1}to me about it and everything.
916
00:38:36,083 --> 00:38:38,083
There's not-nothing to worry about.
917
00:38:38,125 --> 00:38:41,792
{\an4}- Yeah. I don't know if you guys {\an1}can hear yourselves, right now? (Travis chuckles)
918
00:38:41,834 --> 00:38:44,333
{\an5}- You just told me... {\an5}- Yeah. It's crazy. -...that the ground- penetrating radar study...
919
00:38:44,375 --> 00:38:48,083
...located a football -shaped object.
920
00:38:48,125 --> 00:38:51,500
In tandem with that, we have Travis out there...
921
00:38:51,542 --> 00:38:54,291
...getting hit with some type of radiation.
922
00:38:54,333 --> 00:38:57,166
It sounds serious as hell to me.
923
00:38:57,208 --> 00:38:59,542
{\an1}Look, this is your property,
924
00:38:59,583 --> 00:39:01,625
and, you know, I'm gonna defer to you,
925
00:39:01,667 --> 00:39:03,333
because you're the boss.
926
00:39:03,375 --> 00:39:06,750
So, what-what... How do you feel about it?
927
00:39:07,458 --> 00:39:10,458
- There is no way that we proceed with any...
928
00:39:11,000 --> 00:39:13,125
...major activity on that ranch...
929
00:39:13,166 --> 00:39:15,417
...without making sure that we properly assess...
930
00:39:15,792 --> 00:39:17,625
{\an1}...the risks associated with it.
931
00:39:18,625 --> 00:39:22,500
{\an1}Yeah, I think we don't have to {\an1}dig in a major excavation way.
932
00:39:22,542 --> 00:39:25,291
What we do is take, like, auger core samples.
933
00:39:25,333 --> 00:39:28,291
{\an1}And so, you know, if something {\an1}is a few inches in diameter,
934
00:39:28,333 --> 00:39:31,333
we drill down until we get to that first layer
935
00:39:31,375 --> 00:39:33,166
of what the boundary of this thing is...
936
00:39:33,208 --> 00:39:34,417
- Yeah.
937
00:39:34,917 --> 00:39:36,500
-...and we'll do, uh, safety measurements
938
00:39:36,542 --> 00:39:39,000
every couple of feet to make sure it's not...
939
00:39:39,041 --> 00:39:43,083
{\an1}pulling back a toxic chemical or {\an1}a... or something radioactive.
940
00:39:43,125 --> 00:39:45,291
- I appreciate that. I think, uh...
941
00:39:45,333 --> 00:39:46,834
...if that's the case...
942
00:39:47,125 --> 00:39:48,250
...I would...
943
00:39:48,792 --> 00:39:50,500
...you know, with great caution...
944
00:39:50,917 --> 00:39:52,500
...move swiftly to find out...
945
00:39:52,542 --> 00:39:53,959
...what we're dealing with here.
946
00:39:54,917 --> 00:39:56,667
And I'm sorry, Dragon. But I feel like...
947
00:39:56,709 --> 00:39:58,583
...I'm gonna put you in the awkward position...
948
00:39:58,625 --> 00:40:01,333
...of making sure that proper precautions...
949
00:40:01,625 --> 00:40:04,083
...and measures are taken to protect those...
950
00:40:04,125 --> 00:40:05,792
...that are going to be involved with this effort.
951
00:40:05,834 --> 00:40:07,750
Let's make sure that we avoid...
952
00:40:07,792 --> 00:40:09,083
...at all costs...
953
00:40:09,125 --> 00:40:10,625
...any further harm.
954
00:40:10,667 --> 00:40:11,792
I agree with that.
955
00:40:11,834 --> 00:40:13,500
- I don't think we have any choice...
956
00:40:13,542 --> 00:40:15,083
...but to move urgently and find out...
957
00:40:15,125 --> 00:40:17,083
...what is down there.
958
00:40:17,125 --> 00:40:18,250
This could change the whole...
959
00:40:18,291 --> 00:40:20,083
...trajectory of this investigation.
960
00:40:20,583 --> 00:40:22,917
Or it could halt it in its tracks, Brandon.
961
00:40:24,750 --> 00:40:27,625
- Well, let's proceed forward cautiously...
962
00:40:27,667 --> 00:40:29,125
{\an1}...but expeditiously to see...
963
00:40:29,625 --> 00:40:31,083
{\an1}...what really lies beneath...
964
00:40:31,125 --> 00:40:32,250
...and keep me posted.
965
00:40:33,208 --> 00:40:34,959
{\an5}- All right. {\an5}Thanks again for the time. -We'll talk to you soon. -All right.
966
00:40:35,000 --> 00:40:37,208
- See you later, Brandon. - BRANDON: Take care.
967
00:40:39,333 --> 00:40:42,041
{\an1}BRANDON: We're always concerned {\an1}about disturbing the earth,
968
00:40:42,083 --> 00:40:43,542
because we've seen
969
00:40:43,583 --> 00:40:46,458
{\an8}in past history {\an8}that bad things happen.
970
00:40:48,375 --> 00:40:50,458
{\an5}ERIK: I do feel the weight of responsibility.
971
00:40:50,500 --> 00:40:54,750
{\an1}I wonder whether I have covered all the appropriate bases
972
00:40:54,792 --> 00:40:59,041
{\an8}prior to doing {\an7}this unprecedented exploration {\an8}on the property.
973
00:40:59,083 --> 00:41:01,250
♪
974
00:41:01,291 --> 00:41:03,083
BRYANT: I'm as curious as anybody
975
00:41:03,125 --> 00:41:05,083
to find out {\an1}what the heck that big thing
976
00:41:05,125 --> 00:41:07,083
in the ground by Homestead Two is,
977
00:41:07,125 --> 00:41:09,875
{\an8}but it really makes me {\an8}take a step back,
978
00:41:09,917 --> 00:41:12,166
{\an7}because I don't want anybody {\an8}to get hurt,
979
00:41:12,208 --> 00:41:14,041
{\an8}especially the people {\an8}I care about.
980
00:41:15,834 --> 00:41:18,083
{\an8}TRAVIS: {\an7}Ground-penetrating radar said
981
00:41:18,125 --> 00:41:20,166
{\an7}there's something here under {\an8}the road that's anomalous,
982
00:41:20,208 --> 00:41:22,333
{\an8}and the only way to get {\an8}down there and look at it
983
00:41:22,375 --> 00:41:23,709
{\an8}is to dig a hole.
984
00:41:23,750 --> 00:41:26,500
{\an8}So that's exactly {\an8}what we're gonna do.
985
00:41:30,959 --> 00:41:33,000
-SEGALA: Let's get to it. -TRAVIS: GPR has given us
986
00:41:33,041 --> 00:41:34,500
an "'X' marks the spot."
987
00:41:34,542 --> 00:41:35,667
{\an5}SEGALA: They're hitting something hard now.
988
00:41:35,709 --> 00:41:37,041
Man, they're on something.
989
00:41:37,083 --> 00:41:38,959
{\an1}There is an unnatural structure beneath this property.
990
00:41:39,000 --> 00:41:40,792
{\an1}-That whole thing's shaking. -BRYANT: Look at that.
991
00:41:40,834 --> 00:41:42,625
{\an5}-What is that? -SEGALA: Why is that rocking like that?
992
00:41:42,667 --> 00:41:43,959
-TRAVIS: Oh! -TOM: There we go.
993
00:41:44,000 --> 00:41:45,500
THOMAS: I'm hoping that bringing in
994
00:41:45,542 --> 00:41:47,542
{\an1}an exotic animal on the ranch will stimulate
995
00:41:47,583 --> 00:41:49,709
whatever is mutilating these cattle.
996
00:41:49,750 --> 00:41:52,125
{\an5}-(animal shrieking) -TOM: The alpacas have been torn apart.
997
00:41:52,166 --> 00:41:55,250
{\an5}-What is that? -If that's a dog, it's a big dog.
998
00:41:55,291 --> 00:41:57,250
{\an1}(animals continue shrieking)
81323
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