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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:04,533 --> 00:00:06,473 and may contain mature subject matter. 2 00:00:06,467 --> 00:00:15,067 Viewer discretion is advised. 3 00:00:15,200 --> 00:00:17,000 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know, I've been around for a while. 4 00:00:17,133 --> 00:00:21,933 Met some interesting people, done some crazy things. 5 00:00:22,066 --> 00:00:24,066 So you just might think that there's not much that 6 00:00:24,200 --> 00:00:27,870 can take me by surprise. 7 00:00:28,000 --> 00:00:32,400 You'd be wrong. 8 00:00:34,867 --> 00:00:38,127 The world is full of stories and science and 9 00:00:38,266 --> 00:00:41,996 things that amaze and confound me every single day, 10 00:00:42,133 --> 00:00:44,133 incredible mysteries that keep me awake at night. 11 00:00:44,266 --> 00:00:49,396 Some I can answer. Others just defy logic. 12 00:00:51,400 --> 00:00:56,330 NARRATOR: Are we living on a hostile planet? 13 00:00:56,467 --> 00:00:59,297 In Newfoundland, a small community is devastated by 14 00:00:59,433 --> 00:01:03,103 a mysterious explosion. 15 00:01:03,233 --> 00:01:04,673 DARRIN BICKFORD: It really looked like a bomb had gone off. 16 00:01:04,800 --> 00:01:08,470 NARRATOR: Was it a secret weapon or a freak of nature? 17 00:01:10,000 --> 00:01:13,800 On Lake Michigan, a yacht vanishes into thin air. 18 00:01:13,934 --> 00:01:15,174 KATHY DOORE: This is the most extraordinary thing 19 00:01:15,300 --> 00:01:18,100 I have ever, ever witnessed. 20 00:01:18,233 --> 00:01:20,073 NARRATOR: Was it swallowed by an evil fog? 21 00:01:23,266 --> 00:01:26,196 And in the Indian Ocean, two giant flashes of light 22 00:01:26,333 --> 00:01:28,933 send a nation into panic. 23 00:01:29,066 --> 00:01:30,396 JEFFREY RICHELSON: Everybody knew for sure 24 00:01:30,533 --> 00:01:32,733 this was something to be very concerned about. 25 00:01:34,867 --> 00:01:40,167 WILLIAM SHATNER: Yeah, it's a weird world. And I love it. 26 00:01:40,300 --> 00:01:50,270 [♪] 27 00:01:56,300 --> 00:01:59,800 [birds chirping] 28 00:01:59,934 --> 00:02:05,174 WILLIAM SHATNER: Listen. Nature. Isn't it wonderful? 29 00:02:05,300 --> 00:02:07,970 You know, Mother Earth - she's all we have. 30 00:02:08,100 --> 00:02:10,970 Over six billion of us occupy possibly the only 31 00:02:11,100 --> 00:02:13,270 planet in the universe that sustains life but yet 32 00:02:13,400 --> 00:02:19,470 we take everything from her and give very little back. 33 00:02:19,600 --> 00:02:21,770 Is she getting mad at us? 34 00:02:21,900 --> 00:02:25,000 Are killer tsunamis, quakes and tornados the 35 00:02:25,133 --> 00:02:28,803 earth's way of saying enough is enough? Maybe. 36 00:02:28,934 --> 00:02:30,374 But there's something else going on with our planet - 37 00:02:30,500 --> 00:02:33,970 freaks of nature that are impossible to explain and 38 00:02:34,100 --> 00:02:36,630 can strike you out of the blue. 39 00:02:36,767 --> 00:02:43,527 [birds chirping] 40 00:02:45,166 --> 00:02:49,166 NARRATOR: Sunday, April 2nd, 1978. 41 00:02:49,300 --> 00:02:51,170 Twelve-year-old Darrin Bickford was making his 42 00:02:51,300 --> 00:02:54,100 way home on Bell Island, a small community in 43 00:02:54,233 --> 00:02:57,233 Newfoundland on the east coast of Canada. 44 00:02:59,100 --> 00:03:01,670 DARRIN BICKFORD: I was outside riding my pedal bike 45 00:03:01,800 --> 00:03:03,170 and I knew one of my favourite shows came on 46 00:03:03,300 --> 00:03:07,530 television at eleven so I was pedaling back home. 47 00:03:08,967 --> 00:03:10,567 NARRATOR: But Darrin wouldn't get to watch TV 48 00:03:10,700 --> 00:03:12,200 that morning. 49 00:03:12,333 --> 00:03:14,603 Instead, he would witness one of the world's 50 00:03:14,734 --> 00:03:18,604 greatest unsolved mysteries. 51 00:03:18,734 --> 00:03:20,004 DARRIN BICKFORD: As I approached the end of our 52 00:03:20,133 --> 00:03:23,073 driveway, all the birds stopped chirping, all the 53 00:03:23,200 --> 00:03:28,830 dogs stopped barking, it just went so still. 54 00:03:28,967 --> 00:03:33,197 And then it was boom like a shotgun blast, followed 55 00:03:33,333 --> 00:03:37,703 immediately by another boom and then followed 56 00:03:37,834 --> 00:03:41,274 immediately after the second boom the ground 57 00:03:41,400 --> 00:03:43,530 shook underneath me. 58 00:03:43,667 --> 00:03:46,227 It was the biggest noise I have ever heard in my life. 59 00:03:47,900 --> 00:03:50,430 NARRATOR: Suddenly, something unbelievable appears 60 00:03:50,567 --> 00:03:54,697 right in front of Darrin - a glowing ball of light. 61 00:03:56,433 --> 00:03:58,303 DARRIN BICKFORD: It was hovering off the ground 62 00:03:58,433 --> 00:04:01,173 when it appeared out of thin air and the beautiful 63 00:04:01,300 --> 00:04:04,400 colours of blue made up most of the centre of the 64 00:04:04,533 --> 00:04:07,873 ball and outside of the blue, it was orange and 65 00:04:08,000 --> 00:04:10,730 yellow mixing together. 66 00:04:10,867 --> 00:04:13,327 And then just like that, the ball of light just 67 00:04:13,467 --> 00:04:17,167 disappeared into thin air. 68 00:04:18,600 --> 00:04:21,930 It was all over in four or five seconds, but those 69 00:04:22,066 --> 00:04:24,366 four or five seconds are burnt into my brain just 70 00:04:24,500 --> 00:04:25,970 like a roll of film. 71 00:04:27,667 --> 00:04:28,867 NARRATOR: The massive explosion was heard over 72 00:04:29,000 --> 00:04:30,930 sixty kilometers away. 73 00:04:31,066 --> 00:04:33,366 Its impact wreaked havoc. 74 00:04:33,500 --> 00:04:36,170 People reported exploding TV sets, blue flames 75 00:04:36,300 --> 00:04:39,200 shooting from electrical outlets and a strange beam 76 00:04:39,333 --> 00:04:42,873 of light coming from the sky. 77 00:04:43,000 --> 00:04:47,200 This bizarre event was dubbed 'The Bell Island Boom.' 78 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:49,570 DARRIN BICKFORD: After this happened, everyone 79 00:04:49,700 --> 00:04:51,870 was in bewilderment. 80 00:04:52,000 --> 00:04:56,000 NARRATOR: One house seemed to catch the brunt of the boom. 81 00:04:56,133 --> 00:04:59,503 It belonged to Darrin's grandfather James Bickford. 82 00:04:59,633 --> 00:05:01,673 [♪] 83 00:05:01,800 --> 00:05:03,930 DARRIN BICKFORD: Fuses in his fuse panel were glass 84 00:05:04,066 --> 00:05:06,996 fuses that were screwed into the panel. 85 00:05:07,133 --> 00:05:10,273 These had come out like bullets and went about 86 00:05:10,400 --> 00:05:12,830 twenty-odd feet, the length of their hallway 87 00:05:12,967 --> 00:05:15,527 and buried theirselves in the wall. 88 00:05:18,567 --> 00:05:20,527 NARRATOR: Grandpa's chicken coop is demolished 89 00:05:20,667 --> 00:05:23,597 - the chickens inside killed instantly. 90 00:05:25,166 --> 00:05:26,026 DARRIN BICKFORD: It really looked like a bomb had 91 00:05:26,166 --> 00:05:28,566 gone off in his shed. 92 00:05:28,700 --> 00:05:30,870 NARRATOR: It's a bizarre scene, but even more 93 00:05:31,000 --> 00:05:37,630 baffling are three large holes blown into the ground. 94 00:05:37,767 --> 00:05:39,027 DARRIN BICKFORD: It was a cone shaped hole going 95 00:05:39,166 --> 00:05:40,626 three or four feet down. 96 00:05:40,767 --> 00:05:43,167 We didn't know what it was. 97 00:05:43,300 --> 00:05:45,500 NARRATOR: This weird and mysterious incident soon 98 00:05:45,633 --> 00:05:49,203 generates massive interest around the world. 99 00:05:49,333 --> 00:05:52,833 DARRIN BICKFORD: A lot of people came, the media came. 100 00:05:52,967 --> 00:05:55,667 The television news crew had me describe to them 101 00:05:55,800 --> 00:05:58,570 what I had seen. 102 00:05:58,700 --> 00:06:00,170 DARRIN BICKFORD (ARCHIVE): Myself I thought something 103 00:06:00,300 --> 00:06:04,730 happened to the world or someone dropping bombs or something. 104 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:11,370 WILLIAM SHATNER: Now this is really weird or what? 105 00:06:11,500 --> 00:06:12,430 A little kid is riding his bike, minding his own 106 00:06:12,567 --> 00:06:14,297 business when - boom! 107 00:06:14,433 --> 00:06:16,373 His town is suddenly smashed by some mysterious 108 00:06:16,500 --> 00:06:19,030 explosion, turning fuses into lethal weapons, 109 00:06:19,166 --> 00:06:21,696 exploding TV - and what about those poor chickens? 110 00:06:21,834 --> 00:06:23,004 Awful! 111 00:06:23,133 --> 00:06:25,003 What could have caused something like that? 112 00:06:25,133 --> 00:06:26,573 [zap] 113 00:06:28,800 --> 00:06:30,770 Was that me? 114 00:06:33,567 --> 00:06:35,627 NARRATOR: Jim Farrell was a local fire investigator 115 00:06:35,767 --> 00:06:38,567 and one of the first to the scene. 116 00:06:38,700 --> 00:06:40,200 After being asked to investigate, he sends his 117 00:06:40,333 --> 00:06:42,703 report to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. 118 00:06:42,834 --> 00:06:45,974 The RCMP officially concludes that it was lightning. 119 00:06:49,800 --> 00:06:52,070 Farrell begs to differ. 120 00:06:52,200 --> 00:06:54,370 JIM FARRELL: I said I don't believe it's lightning. 121 00:06:54,500 --> 00:06:58,730 I've never encountered anything so great as this force. 122 00:07:00,567 --> 00:07:03,097 NARRATOR: But Jim isn't the only one who wants answers. 123 00:07:03,233 --> 00:07:07,073 Soon, Darrin gets a surprise visit. 124 00:07:07,200 --> 00:07:09,230 DARRIN BICKFORD: There were these strange men. 125 00:07:09,367 --> 00:07:11,797 I was told they were scientists from 126 00:07:11,934 --> 00:07:14,204 Los Alamos, New Mexico. 127 00:07:16,467 --> 00:07:18,697 NARRATOR: The Los Alamos National Laboratory built 128 00:07:18,834 --> 00:07:22,434 and tested the first atomic bombs. 129 00:07:22,567 --> 00:07:25,727 Could there be a connection? 130 00:07:25,867 --> 00:07:28,127 The men interview everyone involved, 131 00:07:28,266 --> 00:07:30,766 including Darrin and Jim. 132 00:07:30,900 --> 00:07:32,530 JIM FARRELL: I told them everything I knew and next 133 00:07:32,667 --> 00:07:36,367 thing I was more or less ordered to turn over my 134 00:07:36,500 --> 00:07:39,730 exhibits to the gentlemen. 135 00:07:39,867 --> 00:07:41,227 NARRATOR: The three strangers leave without 136 00:07:41,367 --> 00:07:43,627 giving any concrete answers. 137 00:07:43,767 --> 00:07:45,767 What were they looking for? 138 00:07:45,900 --> 00:07:48,200 What did Darrin Bickford and the residents of 139 00:07:48,333 --> 00:07:50,773 Bell Island witness? 140 00:07:50,900 --> 00:07:54,130 And what could have created the Bell Island boom? 141 00:07:57,266 --> 00:07:59,266 Science journalist Brian Dunning believes the 142 00:07:59,400 --> 00:08:03,570 answer isn't so earth shattering after all. 143 00:08:03,700 --> 00:08:05,170 BRIAN DUNNING: There was actually about six hundred 144 00:08:05,300 --> 00:08:09,330 booms between starting in late 1977 going through mid 1978. 145 00:08:09,467 --> 00:08:11,397 Nobody could really localize exactly what was 146 00:08:11,533 --> 00:08:13,133 happening but it was, it was heard from South 147 00:08:13,266 --> 00:08:16,896 Carolina all the way up through Canada. 148 00:08:17,033 --> 00:08:18,633 NARRATOR: Could the Bell Island boom be part of 149 00:08:18,767 --> 00:08:21,267 a bigger phenomenon? 150 00:08:21,400 --> 00:08:24,630 What could be responsible for this rash of strange booms? 151 00:08:25,867 --> 00:08:27,127 BRIAN DUNNING: What started happening in 152 00:08:27,266 --> 00:08:29,666 December of 1977 is that the Concorde was flying over. 153 00:08:29,800 --> 00:08:31,530 It was making its supersonic flights between 154 00:08:31,667 --> 00:08:34,527 New York and Europe, and that created sonic booms 155 00:08:34,667 --> 00:08:36,497 coming over the land. 156 00:08:36,633 --> 00:08:38,203 NARRATOR: When planes fly through the air they make 157 00:08:38,333 --> 00:08:40,603 waves, just like a boat in the water. 158 00:08:40,734 --> 00:08:42,704 The faster you fly, the closer the waves build up 159 00:08:42,834 --> 00:08:44,934 at the tip of the airplane. 160 00:08:45,066 --> 00:08:47,366 And when a plane actually goes faster than the sound 161 00:08:47,500 --> 00:08:51,470 waves can move, they pile up into one big sonic 162 00:08:51,600 --> 00:08:54,300 shock wave that can cause damage to the areas on 163 00:08:54,433 --> 00:08:56,503 land below it. 164 00:08:56,633 --> 00:08:59,673 Could the Bell Island boom just have been the effect of 165 00:08:59,800 --> 00:09:04,900 a sonic boom from the world's first supersonic passenger jet? 166 00:09:05,033 --> 00:09:06,503 BRIAN DUNNING: Because it was a sonic aircraft and 167 00:09:06,633 --> 00:09:10,603 made a big sonic boom, it was supposed to go way out to sea. 168 00:09:10,734 --> 00:09:13,234 However, on hot days, because of fuel expansion 169 00:09:13,367 --> 00:09:15,567 issues, it would have to take a short cut route 170 00:09:15,700 --> 00:09:17,470 and it would go over Nova Scotia. 171 00:09:17,600 --> 00:09:19,170 For all the six hundred mystery booms that we 172 00:09:19,300 --> 00:09:22,470 heard, most of them were correlated with sonic 173 00:09:22,600 --> 00:09:24,600 booms from the Concorde and other aircraft. 174 00:09:27,233 --> 00:09:29,903 NARRATOR: Could the world's fastest passenger 175 00:09:30,033 --> 00:09:33,933 jet have caused the tomb on Bell Island? 176 00:09:34,066 --> 00:09:38,666 Or was it something far more deadly? 177 00:09:38,800 --> 00:09:40,170 KARL STEPHAN: It may be something that science 178 00:09:40,300 --> 00:09:42,830 doesn't know about yet. 179 00:09:51,300 --> 00:09:52,600 NARRATOR: A small Newfoundland community is 180 00:09:52,734 --> 00:09:57,734 thrown into chaos by an earth-shattering boom. 181 00:09:57,867 --> 00:10:01,467 Was it caused by a supersonic airliner? 182 00:10:01,600 --> 00:10:04,500 Karl Stephan is a professor of engineering. 183 00:10:04,633 --> 00:10:07,673 His theory is very - electric. 184 00:10:09,100 --> 00:10:10,470 KARL STEPHAN: What I've read of the Bell Island 185 00:10:10,600 --> 00:10:14,930 boom sounds consistent with a super lightning bolt. 186 00:10:15,066 --> 00:10:17,796 NARRATOR: Super lightning bolts are extremely rare 187 00:10:17,934 --> 00:10:22,034 but freakishly powerful bolts of lightning. 188 00:10:22,166 --> 00:10:25,566 KARL STEPHAN: Most lightning has a negative charge. 189 00:10:25,700 --> 00:10:28,200 However, about ten percent or less of lightning bolts 190 00:10:28,333 --> 00:10:31,503 are positively charged. 191 00:10:31,633 --> 00:10:33,603 The current is about ten times what your typical 192 00:10:33,734 --> 00:10:35,404 lightning bolt would have. 193 00:10:35,533 --> 00:10:39,303 So it would make a much louder boom. 194 00:10:39,433 --> 00:10:41,303 NARRATOR: Superbolts almost always occur in the 195 00:10:41,433 --> 00:10:44,233 upper atmosphere over oceans. 196 00:10:44,367 --> 00:10:47,797 Very rarely do they hit land. 197 00:10:47,934 --> 00:10:50,004 But do they explain the weird things seen that day 198 00:10:50,133 --> 00:10:56,173 on Bell Island, like glass fuses acting like bullets? 199 00:10:56,300 --> 00:10:57,400 KARL STEPHAN: Strange things happen when very 200 00:10:57,533 --> 00:10:59,333 large currents flow through wires that aren't 201 00:10:59,467 --> 00:11:00,897 designed to carry them. 202 00:11:01,033 --> 00:11:03,933 Tremendous forces are set up, magnetic forces that 203 00:11:04,066 --> 00:11:08,866 can cause ordinary objects to fly like projectiles. 204 00:11:09,000 --> 00:11:11,330 NARRATOR: Okay, but what about the poor chickens 205 00:11:11,467 --> 00:11:13,227 that were roasted in their coop? 206 00:11:13,367 --> 00:11:15,527 KARL STEPHAN: Chickens are susceptible 207 00:11:15,667 --> 00:11:16,827 to being electrocuted. 208 00:11:16,967 --> 00:11:19,167 What can happen with any kind of animal that are in 209 00:11:19,300 --> 00:11:21,930 a place where lightning hits the ground is the 210 00:11:22,066 --> 00:11:24,226 current running along the ground can actually run up 211 00:11:24,367 --> 00:11:28,667 through the legs and through the body and kill the animal. 212 00:11:28,800 --> 00:11:30,300 NARRATOR: Stephan's superbolt theory seems to 213 00:11:30,433 --> 00:11:33,573 help answer some of the mysterious incidents on 214 00:11:33,700 --> 00:11:36,170 Bell Island, but does it explain the weird glowing 215 00:11:36,300 --> 00:11:40,870 ball of light witnessed by Darrin Bickford? 216 00:11:41,000 --> 00:11:42,870 Stephan believes the answer lies in an 217 00:11:43,000 --> 00:11:47,830 incredibly rare natural phenomena. 218 00:11:47,967 --> 00:11:49,197 KARL STEPHAN: The ball of light hovering sounds 219 00:11:49,333 --> 00:11:51,833 a whole lot like ball lightning. 220 00:11:51,967 --> 00:11:53,727 Ball lightning is sometimes seen to form 221 00:11:53,867 --> 00:11:58,797 right after a lightning strike and it either 222 00:11:58,934 --> 00:12:01,904 disappears silently or it can explode. 223 00:12:05,867 --> 00:12:08,667 We suspect that it is an electrical phenomenon. 224 00:12:08,800 --> 00:12:11,870 It may be something that science doesn't know about yet. 225 00:12:13,734 --> 00:12:15,474 NARRATOR: Did lightning make fuses explode and act 226 00:12:15,600 --> 00:12:17,130 like bullets? 227 00:12:17,266 --> 00:12:18,966 Did it roast those chickens? 228 00:12:19,100 --> 00:12:21,130 Questions persist. 229 00:12:21,266 --> 00:12:24,796 If scientists don't even know what ball lightning is, 230 00:12:24,934 --> 00:12:29,004 how can they think that that's what Darrin saw? 231 00:12:29,133 --> 00:12:32,603 If it was a superbolt, why did high-level personnel 232 00:12:32,734 --> 00:12:37,234 from a top-secret lab show up to investigate? 233 00:12:37,367 --> 00:12:41,197 And finally, what caused the three craters at 234 00:12:41,333 --> 00:12:45,233 James Bickford's place? 235 00:12:45,367 --> 00:12:47,627 Lee Tizzard is an electromagnetic weapons 236 00:12:47,767 --> 00:12:49,497 researcher. 237 00:12:49,633 --> 00:12:52,073 He thinks Mother Nature shouldn't take 238 00:12:52,200 --> 00:12:54,270 the rap for this one. 239 00:12:54,400 --> 00:12:58,100 LEE TIZZARD: I believe the evidence indicates that it 240 00:12:58,233 --> 00:13:03,773 was caused by something manmade and not something by nature. 241 00:13:03,900 --> 00:13:07,600 It was uh an accident. 242 00:13:09,700 --> 00:13:12,900 NARRATOR: But what could cause an accident on this scale? 243 00:13:13,033 --> 00:13:17,603 What kind of accident blows holes in islands? 244 00:13:17,734 --> 00:13:19,334 LEE TIZZARD: During that timeframe the Russians 245 00:13:19,467 --> 00:13:23,427 were pounding North America with a very 246 00:13:23,567 --> 00:13:25,697 powerful and disruptive signal called the 247 00:13:25,834 --> 00:13:28,834 Woodpecker Signal. 248 00:13:28,967 --> 00:13:31,127 NARRATOR: The Woodpecker Signal was a radio signal 249 00:13:31,266 --> 00:13:34,366 used by the Soviets in the 1970s to provide early 250 00:13:34,500 --> 00:13:38,770 warning of an enemy weapons launch. 251 00:13:38,900 --> 00:13:40,900 By bouncing radio waves off the earth's upper 252 00:13:41,033 --> 00:13:43,573 atmosphere, the ionosphere, they could 253 00:13:43,700 --> 00:13:46,370 analyze the returning waves for disruptions 254 00:13:46,500 --> 00:13:48,770 indicating a missile attack. 255 00:13:48,900 --> 00:13:50,070 LEE TIZZARD: It was a ten hertz signal, 256 00:13:50,200 --> 00:13:52,500 ten vibrations per second and it sounded like this, 257 00:13:52,633 --> 00:13:55,833 it sounded like [imitates noise] 258 00:13:55,967 --> 00:13:59,227 and just extremely powerful. 259 00:13:59,367 --> 00:14:01,227 NARRATOR: According to Tizzard, the Woodpecker 260 00:14:01,367 --> 00:14:04,527 Signal was a ticking time bomb. 261 00:14:04,667 --> 00:14:07,527 He believes its use accidentally created 262 00:14:07,667 --> 00:14:09,897 a column of electromagnetic energy, known as 263 00:14:10,033 --> 00:14:14,003 a standing columnar wave, over North America. 264 00:14:14,133 --> 00:14:17,433 Despite being invisible to the eye, this huge energy 265 00:14:17,567 --> 00:14:21,297 field had the potential to be disastrous. 266 00:14:22,867 --> 00:14:24,397 LEE TIZZARD: I believe that the standing columnar 267 00:14:24,533 --> 00:14:28,673 wave that was established collapsed and when the 268 00:14:28,800 --> 00:14:30,670 standing columnar wave collapses, it creates 269 00:14:30,800 --> 00:14:33,830 these vortices of electromagnetic energy 270 00:14:33,967 --> 00:14:37,727 that have to dissipate. 271 00:14:37,867 --> 00:14:42,997 It sent down three spinning vortices of electromagnetic 272 00:14:43,133 --> 00:14:45,803 energy and that's what we believe struck, 273 00:14:45,934 --> 00:14:47,674 explaining the three holes. 274 00:14:49,767 --> 00:14:51,197 NARRATOR: Did a Russian radio signal create an 275 00:14:51,333 --> 00:14:53,503 electromagnetic column over North America, which 276 00:14:53,633 --> 00:14:55,973 accidentally collapsed? 277 00:14:56,100 --> 00:14:58,470 If so, why did it happen on a remote island off 278 00:14:58,600 --> 00:15:00,430 the coast of Canada? 279 00:15:00,567 --> 00:15:04,367 And does it explain the glowing ball of light? 280 00:15:04,500 --> 00:15:06,100 LEE TIZZARD: It's believed that the standing columnar 281 00:15:06,233 --> 00:15:09,973 wave that was created by the Woodpecker Signal was attracted 282 00:15:10,100 --> 00:15:13,830 to Bell Island because of the iron ore content. 283 00:15:13,967 --> 00:15:16,097 It was a former iron ore mine. 284 00:15:16,233 --> 00:15:19,233 NARRATOR: Did the iron-rich Bell Island act 285 00:15:19,367 --> 00:15:22,427 as a giant magnet for a massive burst of 286 00:15:22,567 --> 00:15:25,797 electromagnetic energy caused by the Soviets? 287 00:15:25,934 --> 00:15:29,734 Or was it struck by a superbolt with a side dish 288 00:15:29,867 --> 00:15:32,397 of ball lightning? 289 00:15:32,533 --> 00:15:34,973 Whatever the truth, Darrin Bickford and the other 290 00:15:35,100 --> 00:15:39,700 survivors of the Bell Island boom may never know. 291 00:15:39,834 --> 00:15:42,374 Weird or what? 292 00:15:42,500 --> 00:15:49,330 [♪] 293 00:15:49,467 --> 00:15:53,997 NARRATOR: A mysterious, deadly fog haunts Lake Michigan, 294 00:15:54,133 --> 00:15:58,703 swallowing ships and planes and bending time. 295 00:15:58,834 --> 00:16:01,604 Is this a true freak of nature? 296 00:16:01,734 --> 00:16:04,604 Is it weird or what? 297 00:16:14,300 --> 00:16:16,770 GPS: In three metres, turn right. 298 00:16:16,900 --> 00:16:18,500 WILLIAM SHATNER: You know, modern technology is amazing, 299 00:16:18,633 --> 00:16:19,573 isn't it? 300 00:16:19,700 --> 00:16:20,930 GPS: Turn right. 301 00:16:21,066 --> 00:16:22,726 SHATNER: I mean with nothing but this tiny 302 00:16:22,867 --> 00:16:25,227 gadget I can navigate to within an inch of wherever 303 00:16:25,367 --> 00:16:27,567 I want to go. Look. 304 00:16:27,700 --> 00:16:28,870 GPS: Prepare to turn left. 305 00:16:29,000 --> 00:16:30,630 SHATNER: [laughs] 306 00:16:30,767 --> 00:16:33,767 GPS: Turn left. Go straight ahead. 307 00:16:33,900 --> 00:16:35,300 SHATNER: [laughs] It even talks to you. 308 00:16:35,433 --> 00:16:36,973 What a, what a nice lady. 309 00:16:37,100 --> 00:16:39,330 And it's so accurate. 310 00:16:39,467 --> 00:16:42,767 GPS: Turn right. 311 00:16:42,900 --> 00:16:46,200 Turn right. Turn right. 312 00:16:46,333 --> 00:16:47,673 WILLIAM SHATNER: I can't turn right you stupid thing. 313 00:16:47,800 --> 00:16:49,100 There's a wall here. 314 00:16:49,233 --> 00:16:56,573 GPS: Go straight ahead. Go straight ahead. 315 00:16:56,700 --> 00:16:57,930 Calculating route. 316 00:16:58,066 --> 00:17:01,326 WILLIAM SHATNER: But have you ever felt yourself 317 00:17:01,467 --> 00:17:03,967 disoriented like you're lost in the woods? 318 00:17:04,100 --> 00:17:05,200 Well I am. 319 00:17:06,300 --> 00:17:07,970 GPS: Go straight ahead. 320 00:17:08,100 --> 00:17:09,500 WILLIAM SHATNER: No! 321 00:17:09,633 --> 00:17:12,103 GPS: Calculating route... 322 00:17:12,233 --> 00:17:13,633 WILLIAM SHATNER: It's not a pleasant experience, 323 00:17:13,767 --> 00:17:15,567 I can assure you. 324 00:17:17,100 --> 00:17:18,230 NARRATOR: The Great Lakes of North America hold 325 00:17:18,367 --> 00:17:21,397 a fifth of the world's freshwater. 326 00:17:21,533 --> 00:17:23,603 They're also one of the most popular areas for 327 00:17:23,734 --> 00:17:25,034 sailing in the world. 328 00:17:26,433 --> 00:17:29,173 But on a summer night nearly two decades ago, 329 00:17:29,300 --> 00:17:31,730 Kathy Doore discovered these gentle waters aren't 330 00:17:31,867 --> 00:17:34,827 quite what they seem. 331 00:17:36,233 --> 00:17:37,773 KATHY DOORE: The events of that night challenged 332 00:17:37,900 --> 00:17:41,930 my conventional view of reality. 333 00:17:42,066 --> 00:17:43,726 NARRATOR: It's a warm July evening when Kathy sets 334 00:17:43,867 --> 00:17:46,397 off for a leisurely sail. 335 00:17:48,567 --> 00:17:51,727 KATHY DOORE: Clear sky, light chop. 336 00:17:51,867 --> 00:17:54,367 It was beautiful out. And it was hot. 337 00:17:54,500 --> 00:17:56,800 NARRATOR: Just around nightfall, her calm journey 338 00:17:56,934 --> 00:18:02,774 is upended by something mysterious and alarming. 339 00:18:02,900 --> 00:18:07,270 KATHY DOORE: Very abruptly we encountered fog, 340 00:18:07,400 --> 00:18:09,400 a very strange fog. 341 00:18:09,533 --> 00:18:14,233 It just descended on us. Poof - just like that. 342 00:18:16,133 --> 00:18:20,173 NARRATOR: In minutes, the fog engulfs the boat. 343 00:18:20,300 --> 00:18:23,570 KATHY DOORE: We feared that we might have a crash. 344 00:18:23,700 --> 00:18:27,200 At that point I became very, very, very cold. 345 00:18:27,333 --> 00:18:30,133 In fact, I was freezing. 346 00:18:30,266 --> 00:18:32,926 NARRATOR: Blinded and cold, Kathy and her yacht 347 00:18:33,066 --> 00:18:35,596 have seemingly disappeared into a void. 348 00:18:36,967 --> 00:18:40,297 KATHY DOORE: The boat began a strange aquatic dance. 349 00:18:40,433 --> 00:18:44,703 It began to turn, almost as if it were pirouetting 350 00:18:44,834 --> 00:18:47,534 on its axis. 351 00:18:47,667 --> 00:18:51,997 There was no movement of the sea, this was not a whirlpool. 352 00:18:52,133 --> 00:18:54,133 I looked at the captain and I said who's steering 353 00:18:54,266 --> 00:18:55,526 the vessel? 354 00:18:55,667 --> 00:18:58,727 And he said nobody. It's steering itself! 355 00:18:58,867 --> 00:19:01,697 NARRATOR: Amazingly, the vessel does three complete 356 00:19:01,834 --> 00:19:04,404 360-degree turns. 357 00:19:04,533 --> 00:19:08,873 Then as quickly at it appeared, the fog suddenly vanishes. 358 00:19:10,600 --> 00:19:13,470 They regain control of the boat and head for home but 359 00:19:13,600 --> 00:19:16,630 when Kathy looks at her watch she makes a 360 00:19:16,767 --> 00:19:19,627 startling discovery. 361 00:19:19,767 --> 00:19:21,227 KATHY DOORE: I've gone over this a hundred times. 362 00:19:21,367 --> 00:19:26,267 We should have been back by ten pm and it was after midnight. 363 00:19:26,400 --> 00:19:29,030 We cannot account for two hours. 364 00:19:29,166 --> 00:19:32,966 I don't know what happened to that time. 365 00:19:33,100 --> 00:19:34,630 NARRATOR: Kathy's pleasure cruise had 366 00:19:34,767 --> 00:19:38,367 somehow become a nightmare. 367 00:19:40,100 --> 00:19:41,670 KATHY DOORE: I just remember thinking this is 368 00:19:41,800 --> 00:19:45,200 the most extraordinary thing I have ever, ever witnessed. 369 00:19:47,567 --> 00:19:51,427 NARRATOR: What happened to Kathy and her yacht? 370 00:19:51,567 --> 00:19:53,327 Remarkably, her experience isn't the only weird event 371 00:19:53,467 --> 00:19:55,967 to occur on Lake Michigan. 372 00:19:56,100 --> 00:19:58,470 Numerous unexplained mysteries have occurred 373 00:19:58,600 --> 00:20:05,530 here: passenger airplanes vanishing without a trace, 374 00:20:05,667 --> 00:20:08,727 legends of ghost ships appearing out of nowhere 375 00:20:08,867 --> 00:20:12,497 and thousands of UFO sightings. 376 00:20:12,633 --> 00:20:15,173 Could the mysterious fog Kathy encountered be 377 00:20:15,300 --> 00:20:17,570 linked to these strange events? 378 00:20:17,700 --> 00:20:23,700 Was it a natural phenomenon, or something unknown? 379 00:20:26,066 --> 00:20:28,666 Pilot Bruce Gernon believes he has the answer. 380 00:20:30,633 --> 00:20:32,633 BRUCE GERNON: When I first heard Kathy's story, 381 00:20:32,767 --> 00:20:35,667 I immediately realized that she had experienced what 382 00:20:35,800 --> 00:20:39,130 I call electronic fog. 383 00:20:39,266 --> 00:20:41,426 NARRATOR: Bruce believes that sometimes different 384 00:20:41,567 --> 00:20:45,227 magnetic fields from the earth collide in powerful 385 00:20:45,367 --> 00:20:48,197 freak thunderstorms over remote bodies of water 386 00:20:48,333 --> 00:20:50,373 such as Lake Michigan. 387 00:20:50,500 --> 00:20:55,900 The result is a metallic, highly charged fog. 388 00:20:56,033 --> 00:20:59,733 BRUCE GERNON: It's been known to actually chase 389 00:20:59,867 --> 00:21:03,597 vessels and try to capture them. 390 00:21:05,233 --> 00:21:07,803 NARRATOR: Once formed, the electronic fog is 391 00:21:07,934 --> 00:21:10,904 magnetically attracted to metal objects like ships 392 00:21:11,033 --> 00:21:13,403 and airplanes, wrecking havoc on their 393 00:21:13,533 --> 00:21:17,003 navigational controls and displaying other 394 00:21:17,133 --> 00:21:18,573 incredible properties. 395 00:21:19,934 --> 00:21:22,374 BRUCE GERNON: It has an electromagnetic energy 396 00:21:22,500 --> 00:21:28,570 within it that can become so powerful that it can 397 00:21:28,700 --> 00:21:32,530 affect the fabric of time itself. 398 00:21:32,667 --> 00:21:34,367 NARRATOR: Time warping fog? 399 00:21:34,500 --> 00:21:36,970 An interesting notion, but is there any science that 400 00:21:37,100 --> 00:21:38,670 can back it up? 401 00:21:38,800 --> 00:21:41,370 BRUCE GERNON: NASA has just recently announced 402 00:21:41,500 --> 00:21:44,530 that they have discovered something new in certain 403 00:21:44,667 --> 00:21:48,167 types of thunderstorms and it appears at the top of 404 00:21:48,300 --> 00:21:53,400 the storm - emitting antimatter. 405 00:21:53,533 --> 00:21:55,373 NARRATOR: Created by massive lightning within a 406 00:21:55,500 --> 00:21:58,870 storm, antimatter produces 10,000 times more power 407 00:21:59,000 --> 00:22:01,570 than nuclear energy. 408 00:22:01,700 --> 00:22:04,130 Some scientists speculate that this sort of power 409 00:22:04,266 --> 00:22:07,926 could open doors to new dimensions of time and space. 410 00:22:08,066 --> 00:22:10,466 BRUCE GERNON: And this is a critical discovery that 411 00:22:10,600 --> 00:22:13,470 relates to the electronic fog. 412 00:22:15,367 --> 00:22:17,497 NARRATOR: Incredibly, Gernon says that he knows 413 00:22:17,633 --> 00:22:18,503 what it's like to be enveloped by the 414 00:22:18,633 --> 00:22:20,403 electronic fog. 415 00:22:20,533 --> 00:22:23,303 He claims one of them captured his plane over 416 00:22:23,433 --> 00:22:26,333 the Bermuda Triangle and that he traveled 300 miles 417 00:22:26,467 --> 00:22:29,327 in only ten minutes. 418 00:22:29,467 --> 00:22:30,697 BRUCE GERNON: And that would be impossible to do 419 00:22:30,834 --> 00:22:32,034 in a small plane like this. 420 00:22:32,166 --> 00:22:33,566 You'd have to be going close to two thousand 421 00:22:33,700 --> 00:22:36,570 miles an hour. 422 00:22:38,133 --> 00:22:39,973 NARRATOR: Could a mystery fog have sucked Kathy 423 00:22:40,100 --> 00:22:42,800 Doore forward in time? 424 00:22:42,934 --> 00:22:46,104 Do we need to rewrite our science books? 425 00:22:46,233 --> 00:22:49,803 DAVID CHILDRESS: This is a very real phenomenon. 426 00:23:01,900 --> 00:23:03,600 NARRATOR: A woman and her yacht suddenly disappear 427 00:23:03,734 --> 00:23:06,434 while sailing on Lake Michigan. 428 00:23:06,567 --> 00:23:08,597 Were they taken by a freak of nature known as 429 00:23:08,734 --> 00:23:12,774 electronic fog? 430 00:23:12,900 --> 00:23:15,500 Dr. Donadrian Rice doesn't think so. 431 00:23:16,800 --> 00:23:18,230 DONADRIAN RICE: Human beings are not always 432 00:23:18,367 --> 00:23:22,397 reliable uh witnesses uh to our own experiences. 433 00:23:22,533 --> 00:23:24,433 NARRATOR: For him, the explanation is far more 434 00:23:24,567 --> 00:23:26,227 straightforward. 435 00:23:26,367 --> 00:23:27,927 DONADRIAN RICE: I think what the person was 436 00:23:28,066 --> 00:23:32,396 experiencing was sensory deprivation. 437 00:23:32,533 --> 00:23:33,973 NARRATOR: When our senses are deprived, 438 00:23:34,100 --> 00:23:37,400 say with a blindfold, our brains try to fill in the gaps, 439 00:23:37,533 --> 00:23:39,673 often with strange results. 440 00:23:40,967 --> 00:23:43,667 DONADRIAN RICE: Typically they began to either 441 00:23:43,800 --> 00:23:46,770 hallucinate visually, they could have auditory 442 00:23:46,900 --> 00:23:49,200 hallucinations or they could have kinesthetic 443 00:23:49,333 --> 00:23:52,773 hallucinations with the body. 444 00:23:52,900 --> 00:23:55,070 NARRATOR: Could a regular fog cause Kathy Doore to 445 00:23:55,200 --> 00:23:57,800 hallucinate and mistake an ordinary event for 446 00:23:57,934 --> 00:24:00,374 something fantastical? 447 00:24:00,500 --> 00:24:05,630 Maybe, but how could it explain those two missing hours? 448 00:24:07,000 --> 00:24:08,500 DONADRIAN RICE: You're having a great time at a 449 00:24:08,633 --> 00:24:10,303 party or some place, you know, time seems to go by 450 00:24:10,433 --> 00:24:12,003 very quickly. 451 00:24:12,133 --> 00:24:18,033 If you're sitting in a meeting, [laughs] time goes very slowly. 452 00:24:18,166 --> 00:24:20,696 And of course uh objectively the clocks are 453 00:24:20,834 --> 00:24:22,534 moving exactly the same but that's not your 454 00:24:22,667 --> 00:24:25,067 experience of it. 455 00:24:26,467 --> 00:24:28,227 NARRATOR: Dr. Rice is so convinced that sensory 456 00:24:28,367 --> 00:24:30,667 deprivation is the culprit he's offered to recreate 457 00:24:30,800 --> 00:24:34,900 the weird events of an electronic fog in his lab. 458 00:24:35,033 --> 00:24:36,603 All he needs are headphones, a set of 459 00:24:36,734 --> 00:24:39,904 goggles and ping-pong balls. 460 00:24:40,033 --> 00:24:41,873 That's right, ping-pong balls. 461 00:24:44,633 --> 00:24:46,503 DONADRIAN RICE: The experiment itself is one 462 00:24:46,633 --> 00:24:51,503 where an individual is deprived of visual uh 463 00:24:51,633 --> 00:24:56,873 information by uh having goggles with ping pong 464 00:24:57,000 --> 00:25:02,130 balls cut out placed over the eyes, which lets in a 465 00:25:02,266 --> 00:25:05,726 little light, but otherwise the person is 466 00:25:05,867 --> 00:25:08,197 deprived and at the same time we'll have them 467 00:25:08,333 --> 00:25:11,733 listen to white noise sound. 468 00:25:13,266 --> 00:25:14,996 NARRATOR: The participants are not told how long 469 00:25:15,133 --> 00:25:18,233 their senses will be deprived. 470 00:25:20,767 --> 00:25:22,267 DR. RICE: Tell me a little bit about what you experienced. 471 00:25:22,400 --> 00:25:24,670 MAN: Uh I seen sort of outlines of things, almost 472 00:25:24,800 --> 00:25:26,870 like looking at clouds. 473 00:25:27,000 --> 00:25:28,400 You see shapes in them a little bit. 474 00:25:28,533 --> 00:25:31,733 WOMAN: The darkness around my eyes was growing as 475 00:25:31,867 --> 00:25:35,097 though one was being lowered into the ground, 476 00:25:35,233 --> 00:25:37,403 a little bit unsettling. 477 00:25:37,533 --> 00:25:38,573 NARRATOR: Dr. Rice has proved that depriving the 478 00:25:38,700 --> 00:25:40,770 senses affects perception. 479 00:25:40,900 --> 00:25:45,030 But did they also lose track of time? 480 00:25:45,166 --> 00:25:49,466 [♪] 481 00:25:49,600 --> 00:25:50,700 MAN: I was thinking about five minutes. 482 00:25:50,834 --> 00:25:51,774 I wouldn't have been surprised if it was 483 00:25:51,900 --> 00:25:54,130 actually two minutes. 484 00:25:54,266 --> 00:25:56,066 NARRATOR: Incredibly, the experiment lasted 485 00:25:56,200 --> 00:25:57,830 for twenty minutes. 486 00:25:57,967 --> 00:26:00,797 WOMAN: I don't know where that time went. 487 00:26:00,934 --> 00:26:02,774 WILLIAM SHATNER: Wow, that's an incredible theory. 488 00:26:02,900 --> 00:26:05,000 The fog caused a severe case of sensory 489 00:26:05,133 --> 00:26:08,073 deprivation, which made Kathy hallucinate. 490 00:26:08,200 --> 00:26:10,230 But you know what? 491 00:26:10,367 --> 00:26:12,527 I'm sick of watching all these wonderful experiments. 492 00:26:12,667 --> 00:26:16,427 I want to try this and see for myself. 493 00:26:16,567 --> 00:26:17,497 Great. 494 00:26:17,633 --> 00:26:20,103 Hello? Hello? 495 00:26:20,233 --> 00:26:21,573 Okay, here we go. 496 00:26:21,700 --> 00:26:23,570 Just wait, wait a minute. 497 00:26:23,700 --> 00:26:25,900 Oh yeah. Oh yeah. 498 00:26:26,033 --> 00:26:27,573 I'm definitely seeing something. 499 00:26:27,700 --> 00:26:31,800 I think Dr. Rice might be really onto something here. 500 00:26:31,934 --> 00:26:37,874 Yeah. Yeah. Ah I can see - 501 00:26:38,000 --> 00:26:39,130 white. 502 00:26:39,266 --> 00:26:44,966 I can definitely see white and I am very 503 00:26:45,100 --> 00:26:51,630 disoriented but I have to ask - can this explain 504 00:26:51,767 --> 00:26:58,797 how an entire yacht could get swallowed up by a fog? 505 00:26:58,934 --> 00:27:03,004 Hello? Hello? Are you there? 506 00:27:03,133 --> 00:27:05,173 [crash] 507 00:27:05,300 --> 00:27:06,730 Can someone call a doctor? 508 00:27:12,200 --> 00:27:13,970 NARRATOR: American author David Childress disagrees 509 00:27:14,100 --> 00:27:18,330 these strange occurrences are simply tricks of the mind. 510 00:27:18,467 --> 00:27:22,597 DAVID CHILDRESS: This is a very real phenomenon. 511 00:27:22,734 --> 00:27:26,004 It's not just something that's a psychological 512 00:27:26,133 --> 00:27:30,833 aberration or hallucination on their part. 513 00:27:30,967 --> 00:27:34,867 NARRATOR: For Childress, the answer lies in ley lines - 514 00:27:35,000 --> 00:27:36,830 a matrix of magnetic pathways 515 00:27:36,967 --> 00:27:39,097 crisscrossing the earth, connected by ancient 516 00:27:39,233 --> 00:27:43,203 ceremonial sites. 517 00:27:43,333 --> 00:27:46,473 He believes they can create vortexes of energy 518 00:27:46,600 --> 00:27:50,130 and manifest as the paranormal fog. 519 00:27:51,367 --> 00:27:52,827 DAVID CHILDRESS: It's my view that these vortexes 520 00:27:52,967 --> 00:27:56,527 of energy occasionally are activated, become alive 521 00:27:56,667 --> 00:28:01,267 and become portals or doorways to other 522 00:28:01,400 --> 00:28:03,370 time/space dimensions. 523 00:28:03,500 --> 00:28:06,270 And this is what people get caught up in, in the 524 00:28:06,400 --> 00:28:09,800 Bermuda Triangle or in the Great Lakes Triangle. 525 00:28:11,400 --> 00:28:12,930 NARRATOR: Incredible. 526 00:28:13,066 --> 00:28:14,526 But does it explain what happened to 527 00:28:14,667 --> 00:28:17,197 Kathy and her yacht? 528 00:28:17,333 --> 00:28:18,873 DAVID CHILDRESS: What may have happened to Kathy on 529 00:28:19,000 --> 00:28:22,630 Lake Michigan was that she was in one of these 530 00:28:22,767 --> 00:28:26,527 vortexes when it became activated and suddenly 531 00:28:26,667 --> 00:28:32,227 a mist or fog starts to come in and surround you. 532 00:28:32,367 --> 00:28:35,097 You're not in the same place that you were. 533 00:28:35,233 --> 00:28:38,533 You feel you're in another dimension. 534 00:28:38,667 --> 00:28:41,897 NARRATOR: If, as Childress believes, Kathy really 535 00:28:42,033 --> 00:28:44,533 traveled to a new dimension, how in the 536 00:28:44,667 --> 00:28:46,897 world did she get back? 537 00:28:47,033 --> 00:28:49,773 DAVID CHILDRESS: Many of the people who have gone 538 00:28:49,900 --> 00:28:54,070 through these bizarre vortex areas and survived 539 00:28:54,200 --> 00:28:56,870 are probably very lucky. 540 00:28:58,400 --> 00:29:02,070 We'll never know how many people have been in these same 541 00:29:02,200 --> 00:29:06,630 vortex areas and situations and they never came back. 542 00:29:08,800 --> 00:29:10,900 NARRATOR: Does this solve the mystery? 543 00:29:11,033 --> 00:29:14,103 Did Kathy Doore sail into a patch of fog or into 544 00:29:14,233 --> 00:29:18,033 another dimension? 545 00:29:18,166 --> 00:29:19,896 Was she merely hallucinating as a result 546 00:29:20,033 --> 00:29:22,203 of sensory deprivation? 547 00:29:22,333 --> 00:29:27,103 Or had she entered a time vortex created by ley lines? 548 00:29:27,233 --> 00:29:32,433 Whatever the answer, it's most definitely weird or what. 549 00:29:32,567 --> 00:29:39,197 [♪] 550 00:29:39,333 --> 00:29:41,573 NARRATOR: A blinding double flash of light 551 00:29:41,700 --> 00:29:44,170 is detected over the Indian Ocean. 552 00:29:44,300 --> 00:29:46,530 Did it nearly cause World War Three? 553 00:29:46,667 --> 00:29:47,927 JEFFREY RICHELSON: Everybody knew for sure 554 00:29:48,066 --> 00:29:50,396 this was something to be very concerned about. 555 00:29:59,066 --> 00:30:00,266 WILLIAM SHATNER: When it comes to the mysteries of 556 00:30:00,400 --> 00:30:03,170 Mother Nature, there's a lot of things that aren't 557 00:30:03,300 --> 00:30:04,730 quite as they seem. 558 00:30:04,867 --> 00:30:06,567 It's all a matter of perspective. 559 00:30:06,700 --> 00:30:10,370 What on one hand can look perfectly normal - 560 00:30:10,500 --> 00:30:15,970 on another could look like the end of the world. 561 00:30:16,100 --> 00:30:18,170 That's exactly what happened in 1979. 562 00:30:19,967 --> 00:30:22,767 NARRATOR: Jeffrey Richelson is a U.S. security analyst. 563 00:30:22,900 --> 00:30:26,470 He knows lots of secrets, but he's yet to solve one 564 00:30:26,600 --> 00:30:30,030 of the biggest - the truth behind a mysterious 565 00:30:30,166 --> 00:30:34,796 event known as the Vela Incident. 566 00:30:34,934 --> 00:30:37,234 JEFFREY RICHELSON: It's a fascinating anomaly. 567 00:30:37,367 --> 00:30:41,297 It's a mystery that reads like a techno thriller. 568 00:30:41,433 --> 00:30:44,033 NARRATOR: The tiny Crozet Islands lie in the Indian 569 00:30:44,166 --> 00:30:48,096 Ocean over one thousand miles south of Africa. 570 00:30:49,400 --> 00:30:54,500 Around 3 am on September 22nd, 1979, 571 00:30:54,633 --> 00:30:58,703 something extraordinary happened there. 572 00:30:58,834 --> 00:31:04,034 Without warning, two giant blinding flashes of light 573 00:31:04,166 --> 00:31:06,096 lit up the sky. 574 00:31:07,400 --> 00:31:08,570 JEFFREY RICHELSON: Everybody knew for sure 575 00:31:08,700 --> 00:31:10,930 this was something to be very concerned about. 576 00:31:14,100 --> 00:31:17,100 NARRATOR: Incredibly, seventy thousand miles away, 577 00:31:17,233 --> 00:31:19,303 the flashes were also detected by a 578 00:31:19,433 --> 00:31:22,633 U.S. satellite called Vela 6911. 579 00:31:24,567 --> 00:31:27,267 JEFFREY RICHELSON: That triggered a very high 580 00:31:27,400 --> 00:31:29,930 level of alert and from there word went to the 581 00:31:30,066 --> 00:31:32,726 White House that something might have happened. 582 00:31:32,867 --> 00:31:35,167 They started calling in advisors. 583 00:31:37,433 --> 00:31:39,173 NARRATOR: They took it very seriously, rushing 584 00:31:39,300 --> 00:31:42,470 CIA agents to the area in military planes. 585 00:31:44,433 --> 00:31:46,403 But what triggered this extreme response? 586 00:31:48,066 --> 00:31:49,596 JEFFREY RICHELSON: In 1979, the United States 587 00:31:49,734 --> 00:31:53,234 had concluded a series of arms control treaties with 588 00:31:53,367 --> 00:31:55,567 the Soviet Union. 589 00:31:57,100 --> 00:31:58,570 NARRATOR: The Cold War rivals had just agreed to 590 00:31:58,700 --> 00:32:04,000 stop nuclear tests but the flash detected by Vela 6911 591 00:32:04,133 --> 00:32:07,833 could mean the Soviets were just playing games. 592 00:32:07,967 --> 00:32:09,467 JEFFREY RICHELSON: The Vela satellite's prime 593 00:32:09,600 --> 00:32:12,000 purpose was to detect nuclear detonations. 594 00:32:12,133 --> 00:32:14,873 What they saw was something that's very 595 00:32:15,000 --> 00:32:17,870 indicative of a nuclear explosion. 596 00:32:19,467 --> 00:32:21,797 NARRATOR: Had the Soviets broken faith? 597 00:32:21,934 --> 00:32:24,034 Had they really violated the new treaty and set off 598 00:32:24,166 --> 00:32:25,566 a nuclear bomb? 599 00:32:27,100 --> 00:32:29,700 Each side had thousands of nuclear warheads pointed 600 00:32:29,834 --> 00:32:31,634 at the other. 601 00:32:31,767 --> 00:32:33,227 The stakes couldn't be higher. 602 00:32:34,633 --> 00:32:35,873 JEFFREY RICHELSON: At first the administration 603 00:32:36,000 --> 00:32:38,130 tried to keep wraps on the story and it was a full 604 00:32:38,266 --> 00:32:41,696 court press of intelligence activities to 605 00:32:41,834 --> 00:32:45,934 try to determine what was actually going on. 606 00:32:50,100 --> 00:32:52,900 NARRATOR: With a potential global crisis on its hands, 607 00:32:53,033 --> 00:32:55,233 the U.S. tries to confirm its suspicions by sending 608 00:32:55,367 --> 00:32:58,527 CIA sniffer planes to the Indian Ocean. 609 00:33:02,600 --> 00:33:05,070 Equipped with sensitive radiation detectors, 610 00:33:05,200 --> 00:33:10,630 they get an unsettling surprise. 611 00:33:12,533 --> 00:33:15,233 JEFFREY RICHELSON: There was no radiation detected. 612 00:33:15,367 --> 00:33:18,267 It was a mystery. 613 00:33:20,900 --> 00:33:24,700 They even sent people, CIA officers into West Africa 614 00:33:24,834 --> 00:33:27,374 to get the leaves off trees to see if there was 615 00:33:27,500 --> 00:33:30,730 a residue from a nuclear explosion. 616 00:33:30,867 --> 00:33:33,897 NARRATOR: So what had Vela really seen? 617 00:33:35,333 --> 00:33:36,473 JEFFREY RICHELSON: Maybe they didn't know what 618 00:33:36,600 --> 00:33:37,700 actually happened. 619 00:33:37,834 --> 00:33:39,704 It's been such a mystery for so many years. 620 00:33:39,834 --> 00:33:42,834 In terms of strange events I think it's, you know, 621 00:33:42,967 --> 00:33:45,197 at the top of the list. 622 00:33:47,233 --> 00:33:49,833 NARRATOR: What happened over the Indian Ocean? 623 00:33:49,967 --> 00:33:53,167 What could cause a giant flash of light so powerful 624 00:33:53,300 --> 00:33:56,470 it could be seen seventy thousand miles away? 625 00:33:57,967 --> 00:34:01,767 Tom Reed is an expert in nuclear weapons. 626 00:34:01,900 --> 00:34:03,130 TOM REED: I've fired them. I built them. 627 00:34:03,266 --> 00:34:05,426 I've seen them go off. 628 00:34:05,567 --> 00:34:09,467 NARRATOR: He believes there is only one explanation. 629 00:34:09,600 --> 00:34:13,870 TOM REED: I believe it was a nuclear test. 630 00:34:14,000 --> 00:34:16,400 A nuclear detonation is kind of hard to hide. 631 00:34:16,533 --> 00:34:18,533 I mean it's not some pin drop in the night. 632 00:34:18,667 --> 00:34:20,227 It's a very major event. 633 00:34:23,000 --> 00:34:26,070 NARRATOR: But if no one witnessed the explosion, 634 00:34:26,200 --> 00:34:30,330 how can he be sure that Vela detected a nuclear blast? 635 00:34:30,467 --> 00:34:33,397 TOM REED: A nuclear explosion has this sort of fingerprint. 636 00:34:33,533 --> 00:34:35,103 It is unmistakable. 637 00:34:36,600 --> 00:34:37,670 NARRATOR: This fingerprint is caused by the way 638 00:34:37,800 --> 00:34:41,800 a nuclear bomb explodes. 639 00:34:41,934 --> 00:34:44,374 First, it blasts out deadly gamma radiation 640 00:34:44,500 --> 00:34:50,100 at the speed of light, 186,000 miles per second. 641 00:34:52,400 --> 00:34:54,570 TOM REED: Technically it's a flash but to the human eye, 642 00:34:54,700 --> 00:34:57,070 uh uh, it's this ball of fire and the sun has 643 00:34:57,200 --> 00:34:59,130 come to earth. 644 00:35:02,300 --> 00:35:04,100 NARRATOR: Then, as the explosion grows, 645 00:35:04,233 --> 00:35:08,103 the shockwave produces a second flash. 646 00:35:10,700 --> 00:35:12,830 TOM REED: It's very mind boggling and 647 00:35:12,967 --> 00:35:16,097 it's very frightening. 648 00:35:17,834 --> 00:35:20,004 NARRATOR: Does the data from Vela confirm the 649 00:35:20,133 --> 00:35:26,403 signature double flash of a nuclear bomb? 650 00:35:26,533 --> 00:35:30,603 The recorded flashes are shown as curves on a graph. 651 00:35:32,066 --> 00:35:34,766 TOM REED: These curves, those are like fingerprints. 652 00:35:34,900 --> 00:35:37,430 This first peak is the device going off. 653 00:35:37,567 --> 00:35:40,227 As the bubble expands the energy releases again 654 00:35:40,367 --> 00:35:43,867 and so you get this second rise. 655 00:35:45,266 --> 00:35:46,826 NARRATOR: But if Vela really saw a nuclear 656 00:35:46,967 --> 00:35:50,667 blast, where was the other fingerprint - 657 00:35:50,800 --> 00:35:54,630 the radioactivity? 658 00:35:54,767 --> 00:35:56,397 TOM REED: They decided to put it in a part of the 659 00:35:56,533 --> 00:35:59,833 world that's mostly water. 660 00:35:59,967 --> 00:36:04,097 You then pick a weather condition like a typhoon. 661 00:36:04,233 --> 00:36:06,433 A really serious typhoon would wash all the 662 00:36:06,567 --> 00:36:09,427 radioactive debris right back into the ocean. 663 00:36:09,567 --> 00:36:14,027 The best solution to pollution is dilution. 664 00:36:14,166 --> 00:36:16,266 NARRATOR: Incredibly, weather records confirm a 665 00:36:16,400 --> 00:36:22,430 typhoon was in the area just before the flash, 666 00:36:22,567 --> 00:36:25,927 but who would take such elaborate precautions to 667 00:36:26,066 --> 00:36:28,796 conceal a nuclear test? 668 00:36:28,934 --> 00:36:30,204 TOM REED: People don't develop nuclear weapons 669 00:36:30,333 --> 00:36:31,733 just because it's Thursday. 670 00:36:31,867 --> 00:36:33,327 There has to be some reason. 671 00:36:33,467 --> 00:36:35,797 Every nation that has gone nuclear has gone in 672 00:36:35,934 --> 00:36:41,904 response to a very clear and present threat. 673 00:36:43,400 --> 00:36:45,500 NARRATOR: Did some nation have a reason to feel 674 00:36:45,633 --> 00:36:48,033 threatened in 1979? 675 00:36:48,166 --> 00:36:50,526 Reed believes the answer is obvious. 676 00:36:50,667 --> 00:36:52,397 TOM REED: Israel has very clear and present dangers 677 00:36:52,533 --> 00:36:53,773 on its borders. 678 00:36:53,900 --> 00:36:55,970 The Israelis have technology, they know 679 00:36:56,100 --> 00:37:00,100 weapons, but they didn't have uranium. 680 00:37:00,233 --> 00:37:01,533 NARRATOR: Israel could only make the bomb if it 681 00:37:01,667 --> 00:37:05,267 had a supplier, but who else was threatened enough 682 00:37:05,400 --> 00:37:08,230 to upend the test ban applecart? 683 00:37:08,367 --> 00:37:10,197 TOM REED: At the same time, the Soviets were 684 00:37:10,333 --> 00:37:12,373 pouring troops into Africa. 685 00:37:13,800 --> 00:37:16,430 South Africans mine uranium as a byproduct of gold. 686 00:37:16,567 --> 00:37:18,297 They got so much of it they don't know what to do with it. 687 00:37:19,800 --> 00:37:21,970 NARRATOR: With Soviet forces in nearby Angola, 688 00:37:22,100 --> 00:37:24,100 did South Africa have reason to partner with 689 00:37:24,233 --> 00:37:27,003 Israel and build a nuclear bomb? 690 00:37:29,633 --> 00:37:32,103 Does this explain why a flash occurred in the 691 00:37:32,233 --> 00:37:35,803 remote regions of the Indian Ocean? 692 00:37:35,934 --> 00:37:38,734 TOM REED: It is quite clear to me that this was 693 00:37:38,867 --> 00:37:42,567 a test by the Israelis with logistical support by 694 00:37:42,700 --> 00:37:45,000 the South Africans. 695 00:37:45,133 --> 00:37:46,633 WILLIAM SHATNER: Why is it that whenever someone sees 696 00:37:46,767 --> 00:37:49,627 something weird, they always assume the worst? 697 00:37:49,767 --> 00:37:52,867 I mean honestly, is the world is so paranoid? 698 00:37:53,000 --> 00:37:57,130 Are we really looking at a massive Cold War cover up? 699 00:37:57,266 --> 00:38:00,226 Was the Vela incident nothing more than a crazy 700 00:38:00,367 --> 00:38:04,927 conspiracy theory, or is there another way to solve 701 00:38:05,066 --> 00:38:07,466 this mystery? 702 00:38:07,600 --> 00:38:11,130 NARRATOR: Nuclear testing - it's a plausible theory, 703 00:38:11,266 --> 00:38:14,326 but not everyone agrees. 704 00:38:14,467 --> 00:38:16,627 RICHARD MULLER: Vela never recorded a secret nuclear test. 705 00:38:26,600 --> 00:38:28,130 NARRATOR: A giant flash of light over the Indian 706 00:38:28,266 --> 00:38:31,626 Ocean puts the world on nuclear alert. 707 00:38:31,767 --> 00:38:36,667 Was it a freak of nature or something more sinister? 708 00:38:38,734 --> 00:38:41,974 Professor Richard Muller is a physicist. 709 00:38:42,100 --> 00:38:44,430 U.S. president Jimmy Carter appointed him to 710 00:38:44,567 --> 00:38:46,997 investigate the Vela incident. 711 00:38:48,333 --> 00:38:49,473 RICHARD MULLER: It was an important international 712 00:38:49,600 --> 00:38:51,800 issue with diplomatic consequences and they 713 00:38:51,934 --> 00:38:56,204 needed good scientific review of the data. 714 00:38:56,333 --> 00:38:57,803 NARRATOR: Muller has analyzed the same 715 00:38:57,934 --> 00:39:01,134 information as the nuclear experts, but he's come to 716 00:39:01,266 --> 00:39:03,496 an entirely different conclusion. 717 00:39:04,800 --> 00:39:05,930 RICHARD MULLER: When we began our study, we were 718 00:39:06,066 --> 00:39:08,666 all convinced this really looks like it was a 719 00:39:08,800 --> 00:39:14,000 nuclear explosion but when we did a scientific review 720 00:39:14,133 --> 00:39:17,003 of the data there was something new and different. 721 00:39:17,133 --> 00:39:18,933 NARRATOR: They discovered that Vela had connected 722 00:39:19,066 --> 00:39:22,996 its data with two light sensors called bhangmeters. 723 00:39:23,133 --> 00:39:24,533 RICHARD MULLER: Bhangmeter was a relatively simple 724 00:39:24,667 --> 00:39:29,227 device designed to detect flashes of light. 725 00:39:29,367 --> 00:39:30,967 NARRATOR: But remarkable, the double flash recorded 726 00:39:31,100 --> 00:39:34,470 by each of the two bhangmeters was different. 727 00:39:35,867 --> 00:39:36,827 RICHARD MULLER: The two pulses from the two 728 00:39:36,967 --> 00:39:39,367 bhangmeters didn't match each other. 729 00:39:39,500 --> 00:39:41,330 That was a real mystery but it indicated that this 730 00:39:41,467 --> 00:39:44,697 thing just didn't look right. 731 00:39:46,266 --> 00:39:48,866 NARRATOR: But if there was no blast, what could have 732 00:39:49,000 --> 00:39:53,470 caused a signal that almost caused a nuclear crisis? 733 00:39:55,467 --> 00:40:00,497 The experts are mystified, until Muller has 734 00:40:00,633 --> 00:40:02,403 a flash of insight. 735 00:40:02,533 --> 00:40:06,733 What if it wasn't anything on earth at all? 736 00:40:06,867 --> 00:40:08,197 RICHARD MULLER: The Vela satellite is at 737 00:40:08,333 --> 00:40:09,203 a medium earth orbit. 738 00:40:09,333 --> 00:40:11,473 It's far away in space. 739 00:40:11,600 --> 00:40:13,770 NARRATOR: Seventy thousand miles above the planet, 740 00:40:13,900 --> 00:40:17,230 Vela wasn't protected by earth's atmosphere. 741 00:40:17,367 --> 00:40:20,967 It was bombarded by tiny bits of rock and metal 742 00:40:21,100 --> 00:40:23,900 called micrometeorites. 743 00:40:24,033 --> 00:40:25,173 RICHARD MULLER: These micrometeorites don't 744 00:40:25,300 --> 00:40:27,170 reach the ground because the atmosphere slows them 745 00:40:27,300 --> 00:40:29,270 down and absorbs their energy. 746 00:40:29,400 --> 00:40:31,830 A satellite, such as the Vela satellite, 747 00:40:31,967 --> 00:40:36,127 is frequently hit by micrometeorites. 748 00:40:36,266 --> 00:40:38,026 NARRATOR: But even if micrometeorites smacked 749 00:40:38,166 --> 00:40:41,166 into Vela, how could specks of space dust 750 00:40:41,300 --> 00:40:44,870 replicate the massive double hump shockwave of 751 00:40:45,000 --> 00:40:47,500 a nuclear explosion? 752 00:40:48,800 --> 00:40:49,900 RICHARD MULLER: If a micrometeorite hits the 753 00:40:50,033 --> 00:40:53,533 surface of the satellite, it knocks off dust. 754 00:40:53,667 --> 00:40:55,167 Dust reflects sunlight differently into 755 00:40:55,300 --> 00:40:57,100 the two bhangmeters. 756 00:40:57,233 --> 00:40:59,503 This could be the signal. 757 00:40:59,633 --> 00:41:02,303 NARRATOR: Is it possible the whole world was 758 00:41:02,433 --> 00:41:05,603 freaked out by a fleck of space dust knocked loose 759 00:41:05,734 --> 00:41:09,074 by a microscopic space pebble? 760 00:41:09,200 --> 00:41:13,300 After running more tests, Muller and his team 761 00:41:13,433 --> 00:41:15,803 finally reached a conclusion. 762 00:41:15,934 --> 00:41:18,174 RICHARD MULLER: What we thought was a bright flash 763 00:41:18,300 --> 00:41:20,870 thousands of miles away was actually just a dim 764 00:41:21,000 --> 00:41:23,830 flash that's only a few inches away. 765 00:41:23,967 --> 00:41:25,767 Vela never recorded a secret nuclear test. 766 00:41:25,900 --> 00:41:27,130 It was micrometeorites. 767 00:41:27,266 --> 00:41:29,266 That's almost certainly what we saw back on 768 00:41:29,400 --> 00:41:32,870 September 22nd, 1979. 769 00:41:33,000 --> 00:41:34,670 NARRATOR: Could this whole mystery be solved by 770 00:41:34,800 --> 00:41:36,830 something as simple as space dust? 771 00:41:36,967 --> 00:41:39,627 After all, no one actually ever saw the flash. 772 00:41:39,767 --> 00:41:41,897 Muller's theory became the official explanation of 773 00:41:42,033 --> 00:41:44,673 the U.S. government. 774 00:41:44,800 --> 00:41:48,900 But not everyone is convinced. 775 00:41:49,033 --> 00:41:51,033 TOM REED: Clearly to me from a political point of 776 00:41:51,166 --> 00:41:53,666 view he had every reason in the world to try to 777 00:41:53,800 --> 00:41:55,270 not talk about this. 778 00:41:55,400 --> 00:41:59,500 Form a committee and kick the, kick it downstream. 779 00:41:59,633 --> 00:42:02,533 NARRATOR: Incredibly, in 2010, declassified South 780 00:42:02,667 --> 00:42:05,197 African documents revealed nuclear discussions with 781 00:42:05,333 --> 00:42:09,603 Israel in the years leading up to the Vela incident. 782 00:42:09,734 --> 00:42:14,474 Could the space dust explanation just be a cover-up? 783 00:42:14,600 --> 00:42:15,870 RICHARD MULLER: There are conspiracy theorists who 784 00:42:16,000 --> 00:42:19,470 keep these things alive despite the fact that they 785 00:42:19,600 --> 00:42:21,700 were pretty much settled by people who understood 786 00:42:21,834 --> 00:42:24,604 the arguments at the time. 787 00:42:24,734 --> 00:42:27,334 NARRATOR: In the end, we are left with a mystery. 788 00:42:29,033 --> 00:42:32,633 Was the Vela incident proof of a secret nuclear weapons test? 789 00:42:32,767 --> 00:42:34,367 Or was it merely some space dust that nearly 790 00:42:34,500 --> 00:42:36,900 took the world to the brink of disaster? 791 00:42:39,033 --> 00:42:40,903 Weird or what? 792 00:42:41,033 --> 00:42:46,903 [♪] 793 00:42:49,700 --> 00:42:52,070 NARRATOR: So there we have it, stories of mysterious 794 00:42:52,200 --> 00:42:56,270 freaks of nature from all over the world. 795 00:42:56,400 --> 00:42:57,670 On the east coast of Canada, 796 00:42:57,800 --> 00:42:59,830 an earth-shattering boom stuns a community and 797 00:42:59,967 --> 00:43:03,867 leaves scientists scratching their heads. 798 00:43:05,500 --> 00:43:07,870 On Lake Michigan, a mysterious fog terrorizes 799 00:43:08,000 --> 00:43:12,430 a sailor and alters the very fabric of time. 800 00:43:14,133 --> 00:43:16,673 And over the Indian Ocean, a blinding double flash of 801 00:43:16,800 --> 00:43:20,470 light creates a nuclear crisis. 802 00:43:20,600 --> 00:43:21,970 [♪] 803 00:43:22,100 --> 00:43:24,530 Are these stories evidence of mysterious forces at 804 00:43:24,667 --> 00:43:28,067 work within the world? 805 00:43:28,200 --> 00:43:32,570 Do we dismiss those who claim they are true? 806 00:43:32,700 --> 00:43:35,100 You decide. 807 00:43:36,433 --> 00:43:38,003 WILLIAM SHATNER: Join me next time for more stories 808 00:43:38,133 --> 00:43:42,903 that will undoubtedly be weird or what? 809 00:43:46,400 --> 00:43:47,370 [♪] 61845

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