- #36
Aether
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Thanks. I have plotted the last two points on an aeronautical chart here (http://img238.imageshack.us/img238/1/jal1628crazymtsfu8.jpg ), and I have projected a 7nm line 60 degrees to the left of the aircraft's heading which goes to approximately 65:44 by 145:12 using your lat/lon notation. This line happens to terminate right on top of the highest mountain peak in the "Crazy Mountains". Note: JAL1628 was inside of a Military Operations Area (MOA) when their weather radar made contact with the cloud-like target.bruce maccabee said:My estimated locations based on a map drawn by an FAA investigator at the time is at 5:09, 67:40 (67 deg, 40 minutes) lat and 142:20 (west) longitude; at 5:24, 65:50 by 145:20 and at 5:30, 65:10 by 146:30. I have not tried to be accurate to a minute of arc. These numbers are interpolations between markings on an aero map and should be good enough to look for correlations between clouds and sightings.
I have also plotted all four points on top of the NOAA-10 image of Alaska from 11-18-1986 02:48 (UTC) which can be viewed here (http://img79.imageshack.us/img79/4861/jal16280248xb4.jpg ). A small red arrow points to the location of the weather radar target, and lat/lons are labeled for the four corners of the image in case anyone wants to plot some additional points by interpolation. There are both static and non-static structures in the vicinity of the radar target, so I will post one or two additional images from before and/or after this time in order to help reveal which structures are static and which are in motion.
I have not concluded that aurora borealis explains the first two lights in front of the aircraft, but rather I am presenting this as a possibility for further discussion. I have ruled out volcanoes, earthquakes, and rockets launched from the Poker Flat Research Range (http://www.pfrr.alaska.edu/) however.Regarding the aurora explanation, the lights in front of the aircraft were distinct lights like distant fires or exhaust pipes in two parallel vertical rows as shown in Terauchi's simple sketch made after the plane landed in Anchorage and again with more detail 2 months later (about) during the FAA interviews. There were two objects, apparently, each with these parallel arrays of lights. The captain estimated that for 2 minutes after their appearance in front of the aircraft they were one above the other. Then they shifted to side by side for about 10 minutes. As they traveled ahead of the airplane they rocked left and right in a correlated manner.
Other that what is said in your report about them, I haven't seen either of his published explanations yet.Klass' first explanation, by the was, was "extraterrestrial." In Feb 1987 CSICOP (now CSI) published its extraterrestrial explanation: Mars and Jupiter. It was only after my report was published in the IUR that Klass advanced his second theory.
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