Visitors Now: | |
Total Visits: | |
Total Stories: |
Story Views | |
Now: | |
Last Hour: | |
Last 24 Hours: | |
Total: |
Past expeditions to find conclusive evidence for the existence of Bigfoot have at least two things in common: They were unsuccessful, and they were ground-based.
That’s why the Falcon Project will make history regardless of whether it achieves its goal of capturing “clear, steady film evidence of a Hominoid in its natural habitat.”
Using a 45-foot-long, camera-mounted, remote-controlled airship, project founder William Barnes plans to work with a team that includes one scientist to conduct nighttime flyovers of reported Bigfoot hotspots around the United States.
Barnes, a gold dredger whose current endeavor was inspired by an alleged encounter with a Bigfoot-like creature he claims to have had in 1997, thinks the helium-filled craft will allow his team to succeed where others have failed due to its unprecedented advantages in two key areas: stealth and maneuverability.
The camera aboard the craft can film in infrared, thermal imaging and high definition. And as the ship scans densely wooded regions from a penetrating vantage, it will never spook a potential subject with a broken twig or run out of breath in a one-sided foot race, Barnes believes. [ Want to Shoot Bigfoot? It's Legal in Texas ]
Thanks to its gyroscopically stabilized housing, the ship’s camera is protected against a common shortcoming of purported video footage of quasi-mythical creatures: a suspiciously shaky image.
While there has never been any definitive evidence suggesting that giant bipedal apes roam the wilds of North America largely undetected, the Falcon Project does have a bona fide scientist as its principal investigator.
CONTINUED THE REST OF THIS ARTICLE AT THE FOLLOWING LINK WHERE YOU CAN FIND MORE INFORMATION ON SASQUATCH AND THE STEALTH AIR SHIP AND MORE BIGFOOT INFO