Video Unveils New Probe into Pennsylvania’s Own Roswell, Intensifying UFO Crash Enigma (3 of 4)
While NASA continues to suggest the object was probably a meteor, they haven’t dismissed theories proposing it could have been a Soviet satellite.
According to Beban, the most peculiar aspect of this incident was its temporary prominence in the media, which eventually dissipated into obscurity amid mysterious silence.
In pursuit of clarity, Bustamante and Beban enlisted the skills of technologist Pete Kelsey, hoping he could pinpoint the location of the supposed extraterrestrial collision.
To identify potential crash sites, Kelsey employed drone-mounted LiDAR technology and a slam scanner, generating a detailed topographical map of the terrain.
Subsequently, the group reconvened to analyze the scan outcomes, discovering what Kelsey described as a segment of ‘man-made earthwork’.
According to Kelsey, ‘It’s positioned on an even keel with the surrounding steep incline. Straight edges, perpendicular corners. Such formations aren’t naturally occurring.’
Armed with portable spectrum analyzers, they revisited the precise location to evaluate the radio wave emissions.
The site purported to be where the crash occurred exhibited a radio signature dramatically distinct from that of another area merely 20 feet distant, which showed a uniform frequency.
‘This is completely illogical. How can there be a radio signal in one spot and then, just a few feet over, nothing at all? That contradicts the principles of radio energy,’ remarked Bustamante.
‘Each new piece of evidence we uncover further solidifies the belief that something out of the ordinary occurred right here, in this very ravine in Kecksburg,’ he elaborated. ‘It’s becoming increasingly likely that we’ve pinpointed the actual location of the crash.’
At the 20th annual Kecksburg UFO Festival held over the past weekend, a celebration Strubel initiated in 2005 with the volunteer fire department’s approval, he shared these exciting discoveries.