Haines, Richard F.
Text: Private Communication to T. E. Bearden. On the night of July 27, 1984 the pilot and crew of a Boeing-747 (American carrier) flying from Tokyo to Fairbanks, near the Kuriel Islands, at 47 degrees 5' 44" N: 161 degrees 00' 05" E, noticed a slowly expanding hemisphere of white light off to their left above the horizon. The shell of light continued to expand over a 10 minute period until it was visible ahead of them and to their right side. Crew braced for a shock wave which never arrived. Their weather radar saw nothing out of the ordinary. Shell of light had sharp edges and was semi-transparent (stars were visible through it). Very probably artificial scalar interferometry. Probably a product of the same class of device which produced the anomalous "cold explosion" south of the Kuriels, observed by another Boeing-747 crew on Apr. 9, 1984, and some 77 other anomalous "cold explosions" observed in the Soviet Arctic by U.S. weather satellites since 1974. Sept. 27, 1984.
See Also: artificial scalar interferometry, weapons testing, anomalous light phenomena, scalar electromagnetics, electromagnetic anomalies, Soviet weapons.
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