UFO-like clouds linked to military maneuvers
Ted CHAMBERLAIN
Triple “hole-punch clouds” appeared close together off South
Carolina January 7.
Blue sky and white “hole punch” clouds appear amber, due to
camera-phone settings, in a picture taken in Myrtle Beach, South
Carolina, early this month. Photograph courtesy P. Wesley Tyler
Jr.
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Three nearly identical, UFO-like cloud formations recently appeared
over Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, sparking online discussions linking
the features to everything from the Second Coming to recent mass bird
deaths to secret military experiments.
At least one scientist believes the so-called hole-punch clouds have
a military explanation, though it may not be quite what conspiracy
theorists expect.
On January 7, IT technician Wesley Tyler was running out to his car
for a computer part when he noticed the saucer-like formations.
“At first we thought they were tornado clouds, but the air was so
still, like mausoleum still,” Tyler said. “You just knew it was unusual.
I’ve lived on the beach for years and never seen anything like that.”
Back home, he uploaded pictures of the clouds to Facebook, tagging a
meteorologist friend, who later identified the phenomena as hole-punch
clouds, or punch-hole clouds.
Hole-punch clouds are miniature snowstorms that can occur in thin,
subfreezing cloud layers.
The lack of fine particles, such as dust, in the clouds means water
droplets have little to condense around, so they don’t turn to ice until
the cloud hits about minus 38 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 36 degrees
Celsius).
“Basically, the water molecules become sluggish enough at this
temperature to form their own cluster of ice that produces an ice
crystal spontaneously,” according to ice microphysicist Andrew
Heymsfield.
When airplanes ascend into this type of cloud, the rearward force
created by propellers or by air forced over wings causes air to expand.
This expansion can cool a vaguely circular section of the cloud to
the point where many of the water droplets freeze and ice crystals form,
according to a June hole-punch cloud study co-authored by Heymsfield in
the Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society. Over the next 45
minutes or so, ice crystals grow and spread outward, often resulting in
a tightly contained, roughly half-hour snowstorm, leaving behind a hole
“punched” in the cloud.
Triple hole-punch clouds linked to HAARP, heaven Tyler, the
photographer, was skeptical of the airplane explanation, due to the
sheer number and close proximity of the cloud formations. “I’ve scoured
the Internet and have yet to find more than one hole-punch cloud in a
single frame,” he said.
Myrtle Beach International, he added, is “not that busy an airport.”
And, he said, “I’ve read that these clouds form at 20,000 feet (6,100
meters), and these clouds looked like they were right above us.
“I doubt they were created by airplanes,” Tyler concluded, and he’s
not alone. After his pictures were posted on spaceweather.com, the
Myrtle Beach resident began hearing from people all over the world.
Some suspected a more colorful cause, perhaps the military-funded
High Frequency Active Auroral Research Program, or HAARP, which
conspiracy theorists have linked to earthquakes, chronic fatigue
syndrome, global warming, and other phenomena.
Though remote, the observatory-and-antenna facility in Gakona,
Alaska, is anything but secret. Even so, its use of radio waves to
“excite” areas of Earth’s ionosphere has helped convince some that HAARP
can control weather, and perhaps even create triple hole-punch clouds.
“There is no doubt,” one HAARP theorist wrote of the Myrtle Beach
apparition on the Big Wobble message board, “it’s an electromagnetic
corridor produced by our technology.” Another wrote on Starseeds.net,
“This could be related to HAARP or some weather manipulation as it also
ties in with the bird deaths.” And on Rapture in the Air, a site devoted
to signs of the Second Coming of Christ, “mike” wrote, “Hope the photos
was taken after three invisible space (arks) came down from heaven which
the Lord has sent to earth. ... “
While Tyler doesn’t necessarily buy these theories, he thought the
airplane explanation was flawed. “There must be another explanation,
natural or otherwise.”
Military responsible for odd clouds
To Heymsfield, the physicist, the explanation is both natural and
otherwise. “To me, it’s a slam dunk” that these are hole-punch clouds
that were created the usual way, by planes, National Center for
Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado, Heymsfield said.
There’s “nothing at all” surprising about the picture, he added.
For one thing, it’s the right type of cloud, thin, with no other
layers above it, as evidenced by the clear skies just beyond, he said.
And the cloud layer’s temperature fits the hole-punch model: 14
degrees Fahrenheit (minus 10 degrees Celsius), according to National
Weather Service records.
As for the cloud being low in the sky, 9,000 feet (2,700 meters),
according to the weather service, “it doesn’t matter,” as long as the
cloud layer is cold enough, he said.
But why three together?
“The hole sizes and the structure of the snow falling out of the
holes suggest that all three holes were made at nearly the same time,”
he said. “My suspicion is that military aircraft were flying in
formation or one behind the other.”
And in fact, it’s ‘very common’ for training maneuvers to take place
over Myrtle Beach, according to Robert Sexton, community relations
manager for nearby Shaw Air Force Base. More to the point, Sexton
confirmed that fighter jets from Shaw and from the South Carolina Air
National Guard’s 169th Fighter Wing were training off the South Carolina
coast on January 7 between 9 am and 2 pm.
National Geographic News
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