The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch (2020–…): Season 4, Episode 11 - In the Heat of the Night - full transcript

When the team performs a hi-tech experiment at the Triangle, it leads to a stunning revelation that may explain the strange phenomena on Skinwalker Ranch.

- Holy cow.
- What? What?

We've got a clear anomaly

right outside the aircraft.

There's something in the sky
above the rocket.

- Yeah, look at that.
- No way.

- That's only 30 feet above us.
- My God.

Yeah, they're going...
they're going... running

- into each other!
- Well, that one just hit.

Right about that 31-foot mark.

It looked like the
border went off

as the rocket was
flying through it.



There is
a ranch in Northern Utah.

It is considered the epicenter

of the strangest and most
disturbing phenomena on Earth:

animal mutilations,

bizarre UFO sightings

and unusual energies that
have proven harmful to humans.

For 20 years, the
federal government

tried to find
answers and failed.

Now a new team of
dedicated scientists,

researchers and
experts has taken over.

They are determined to
solve the mystery and reveal...

The Secret of Skinwalker Ranch.

I know some of these guys.

- Hey, there.
- Bring it in right here, man.



How you doing? Haven't
seen you in forever, man.

Appreciate you guys coming out.

We got a lot of stuff
planned for this evening.

We've seen
more phenomena this year

than ever before all
across Skinwalker Ranch.

Best way to describe
what we're gonna do tonight

is a multiphysics
experiment over the triangle.

One place that we now believe

could be a possible source
for a lot of those anomalies

is a spot in the
middle of the property

that we call the triangle.

- Do you see this?
- Yeah!

Wow!

It's moving way too fast

for it to be a satellite.

We've not only
seen UAPs above it

that suddenly
vanished into thin air...

And
gone. That's insane.

But during a recent
radar balloon experiment...

These are huge anomalies.

You now have
actual data telling us

there's a quarter of a second
time anomaly over the ranch.

Are we seeing
evidence of a portal?

At an altitude
of about 10,000 feet,

we actually recorded
multiple time shifts

of a quarter of a second

that, according to Einstein's
theory of general relativity,

could be evidence
of a gravitational effect

on time itself that
would be seen

around things like black holes
or even traversable wormholes.

Nobody's ever
measured any anomaly

like that on the planet.

Exactly.

But the craziest
thing we've witnessed

happened two months ago,

when something that
looked like a cloudy blob

caused a rocket to
explode above the triangle

just 31 feet in air.

There is literally something...

We may be looking at the
anomaly for the first time, guys.

So, to figure out just
what the heck the blob is,

we invited pyrotechnic
expert Nathan Whitehead,

along with my friend
Cameron Prince,

an electromechanical engineer,

to help us poke the spot
31 feet above the triangle

harder than ever before.

So, tell us a little bit
about what you brought,

and all that kind of stuff.

What I brought with
me is a-a flamethrower.

We're gonna shoot
out 110, 120 feet of fire.

Wow.

Wow. So how hot,
is this gonna be burning

When-when, when
the flame's being projected?

Yeah, it's almost 2,000 degrees.

- Wow.
- Yeah, so it's-it's pretty hot.

Cameron, did you
bring, a Tesla coil?

You know me.
I got the lightning.

All right, good.

I've got two different
cameras with different things

that we can do with those
to see what kind of anomalies

- that we can catch.
- Yeah, and there will be plenty of heat and light,

- for your cameras to be illuminated at night.
- Yeah.

- Plenty.
- David, you brought

several different
cameras, right?

For-for infrared

- and thermal imaging, right?
- Right.

Well, I know that Thomas

and our fire
marshal Don Mitchell

are down in the triangle
setting up everything otherwise.

Well, hey, look,
we're burning daylight.

- Yeah, I'm excited to show y'all.
- Awesome.

Once the sun goes down,

using mechanical lifts,
we'll raise Cameron Prince

to that spot where he'll
use a handheld Tesla coil

to project more than 600
volts of electricity through it

to see if that causes the
phenomenon to appear.

Yeah, check this out, guys.

And if that doesn't
work, Nathan Whitehead will also

be lifted to the 31-foot
zone, so he can literally fire

2,000-degree flames
through that anomaly.

We're gonna shoot about
110 feet with this thing.

Boy.

All right,
everybody follow me out.

Let's be honest about this.

Almost every experiment
that we have performed to date

out here at the
triangle has produced

some kind of exceptional,
even anomalous result.

With this experiment,
we are hopeful

and even optimistic that we'll
have the opportunity to see

the anomaly over the triangle
as has never been seen before.

Here we are.

All right.

You guys got a lot
of it already set up.

Yeah, we're halfway there.

For tonight's experiment,

Burdette Anderson
will be recording

with his high-speed cameras,

which take 5,000
frames per second.

And technologist David Mason

will also be filming
the experiment

with his high-resolution
thermal FLIR cameras

that can visualize
anything with an anomalous

heat signature that
the naked eye can't see.

Everybody start getting set
up, do whatever you got to do.

If anything affects
the shape of the flames

or if the blob itself

appears again from
the electricity stimulation,

hopefully tonight,
we'll finally be able

to figure out what in
the world it really is.

All right, great, I think
we got this station set up.

Yeah, looks good.

You ready over there, Travis?

Yeah, man, I am.

Even though we were eager to see

what would happen
when the Tesla gun

and the flamethrower
were used at the triangle,

in all of our previous
experiments there,

we've had great success
stimulating phenomena

to occur by launching rockets.

So to be consistent,

Erik and I decided that's
the best way to start tonight.

Burdette,

- are you set up?
- I'm ready to go,

I'm ready to trigger
when you guys are ready

to fire that rocket.

After all,

that's what we believe
originally triggered the blob

to appear at the 31-foot
level earlier this year.

What we're planning to do now...
Certainly, if there's something

at 30, 40 feet above
the center of the triangle,

- we're gonna get its attention.
- Let's go do it.

- All right, Dragon, let's go get it set up.
- All right.

During this
observational exercise,

we will be monitoring
any response that we get

from the anomaly
using our standard kit,

including the
spectrum analyzers,

our TriField meters, of
course. We also have

our GPS loggers that
allow us to determine

whether anything unusual

may be happening
with space-time itself.

Of course we'll be
watching from the ground.

All right, let's do it.

I don't know what's
going to happen.

I don't think anyone does.

Cameras ready!

- Burdette, you good?
- Good.

You guys ready to roll?

- We're ready to roll.
- David, you good?

We're ready.

Three, two, one.

- Did you get that, Burdette?
- Yeah.

Hey, guys,
you should take a look at this.

- You're gonna want to see this.
- Yeah?

Look at that.

There is our 31-foot mark.

Takes a distinct turn right
into it, and, like, around it.

That's right where
it exploded last time.

Exactly right
there, it exploded.

How about that? At
the exact same height.

And then, as soon
as we get up at about 75, 80 feet,

it starts going straight
again, right there.

It's crazy.

- Did you see that?
- Yeah.

We do not have a
good explanation for this.

That-that defies rocket science.

That is not what that
was supposed to do.

You know,
seeing this makes me want

to get that Tesla coil up there,

because if there's
something there...

- Yeah.
- Who knows what we'll see.

Let's do it. Let's
get on with it.

After the bizarre diversion

of the rocket's trajectory,

we immediately wanted
to get Cameron Prince

lifted to the 31-foot-level
so he could shoot electricity

from his Tesla gun
through that zone

to see if we could get
the anomaly to appear.

- Cameron, you ready?
- I'm ready.

All right, well, let's
go start loading up.

We are going
to transmit electrical energy

into the air with a Tesla coil.

A Tesla coil is an air core
transformer that creates

a very high-frequency,
high-voltage current

that produces these
lightning-like discharges.

All right, so
we're gonna start raising up.

The idea is to see if this can

somehow provoke or illuminate,
make visible this phenomenon.

Are you ready to fire?

Yes, we are. Are you ready?

All right, I'm gonna count down.

Three, two, one.

Wow.

That's bright.

Beam looks
pretty well-behaved right now.

Yeah. That's
what I was thinking, too.

Ready to come down?

Yeah, I think so.

After something
that we couldn't see

diverted a rocket just
31 feet above the triangle,

we were hoping
that Cameron Prince

could get whatever it was

to appear by pumping
over 600 volts of electricity

into that zone.

Well, did, you guys
see the arcs and stuff

on the high-speed and...?

Yeah, I got some color
arcs on the high-speed.

- Yeah? Didn't see any anomalies or anything?
- No.

Well, maybe when
we go back in, we look through

all this together and take more
time to go through each frame

or whatever, we
might see more to it.

Sounds good.
Let's reset for the flamethrower.

I'm ready to go,
everything's downloaded.

All right.

Nothing obviously strange
happened at the 31-foot level

above the triangle during
the Tesla gun operation.

You can
hold that up if you want.

But even still,

the anticipation of
shooting a massive flame

right through the blob
zone was pretty intense.

And we were all on edge.

That's 31 feet.

I'm ready... I'm rolling
and ready to trigger.

All right, Bryant,

I'm gonna give you a
countdown from five.

On five, -Five,

-four, three, -four, three,

- two, one.
- Two,

one.

Wow.

- You can feel it.
- Look at... Look at that.

Whoa, wow. Wow.

Nice. That's incredible.

Perfect, Nathan.

I have something that
might look a little strange.

- What? What?
- Okay, well, let me call the guys over

and we'll take a look together.

What are you guys seeing?

I see...
Look at this one.

Burdette, frame back

on this one a little bit
and frame through it a...

Okay.

Yeah, there's-there's,
there's clearly some empty spots.

I'll tell you
guys, we've, you know,

seen a lot of, a lot of footage
of out-our flames shooting out,

and it's not typical that
we have this separation.

- Really?
- Yeah, that's correct.

- Yeah, what...
- That's-that's not typical at all.

- Why is it horseshoeing?
- It's like

it's hitting something
or something's...

there's an air current
there or something.

- Yeah, I'm not sure.
- Something that's...

it seems to be going around it.

It was great that we
had Burdette's camera system,

because even though we
didn't see in the moment,

when we played the
high-speed camera shots back,

something at the 31-foot level

literally split the flame
from Nathan's device in two.

It's almost like
when it hits this point,

it stops and it hits...
It-it runs into something

- and it has to curl back 'cause it still has that...
- Yeah.

That inertia, it still
has the momentum,

so it has to go
back the other way.

- This is unusual.
- Yeah, it was a really...

It was a very unusual night.

This experiment gave
us incredible correlating data

that something strange
that diverts physical objects

does exist at the 31-foot level.

Was it the blob? Was
it evidence of a portal?

Well, I'm not certain
about any of that,

but we do have a lot of
recorded data to review,

and maybe it'll
help us figure it out.

It's becoming repeatable
that when we launch rockets

from this spot, that
we are getting a...

you know, the strange m...
maneuver with the rocket,

when it gets to about
30 to 40 feet up there.

And it's s...
Happening almost,

I would say, more
times than not,

which is a statistical
weird thing, right?

And then, seeing the-the flames

- do the weird things...
- Yeah.

Both of them, in
two different times,

we saw these
strange vortices occur.

Yeah, like there
were voids in them

or they, or they break apart
and separate themselves.

So, I... you know, I-I don't
know what to make of that.

Well, and I'll tell you,

I-I'm looking forward
to being able to sit down

at the command center
here in a day or two

and-and review the footage

and-and s... and
look at it closer.

I think we've
accomplished everything

we can do tonight, though, so...

- Yeah.
- I'm all for calling it a day.

Yeah, and we got a lot
of equipment to pack up.

I say we-we load up everything

and call it a night,
what do you think?

- I second that.
- Yep. Let's get out of here.

- Thanks, everyone.
- All right, let's do it.

I've got some
high-speed camera footage.

Yeah.

So I want to bring
this up to the screen

for us to look at how
that rocket actually moved.

This is coming up out of
the center of the triangle.

- Yeah.
- And suddenly...

Suddenly something turns it.

- Right there.
- Right there.

And we... and we're
still scratching our heads

as to... in response
to what, is this thing

- changing directionally?
- Right.

That was the rocket launch,

and I have some
high-speed footage

- of the flamethrower exercise.
- Yeah.

And if you see a feature
that you want to point out,

just stop me.

- Okay, so here we see...
- Wow.

Look at that thing.

Well, that looks
exactly like you'd expect.

The liquid is being tossed
out on a ballistic trajectory.

Right? It's gonna
go out on a curve

just like you threw a baseball,

but it's a liquid.

Now, that's interesting how...

you're getting this separation.

And look at the curve... the
curve that's forming there.

Why did it do that
all of a sudden?

What's pushing the
flame downwards?

I'm not trying to
debunk it, saying

there's not something there
making the fire go around it.

- Sure.
- But it looks more like what happened

is you burned out all
the oxygen of that spot

and you created a pocket
that forced the fire, below it.

It's basically the same reason,

weather systems push
against each other...

A high-pressure and
a low-pressure system,

warm front, cold
front pushing it...

But that's why you
get the little vortices,

- you get tornadoes and stuff.
- So we're depleting the oxygen

in that dark zone?

- Is that what you're saying?
- That's what I'm thinking it is now,

when... watching it form.

As objective scientists,

Erik and I have to first look
for mundane explanations

for strange things that
happen out here on the ranch.

Now, it could be that the
flames being shot into the triangle

were split by oxygen
being burned up,

causing parts of
them to extinguish.

However, I think that hypothesis
is inconclusive at this point,

given that it occurred
at the 31-foot level.

Now, this same event

is captured in the, um...

- near infrared.
- Really?

Yeah, and so I have that record.

- Here we go.
- There we go.

Okay.

That's fantastic, right there.

Hey, back up, back up,
back up. What is that?

Okay.

So I'll play it through

at the negative rate and
you can stop... stop me...

Wait, wait. Stop. Wait...
R-Right here, look.

- Yeah, I was seeing those same things.
- Right there.

- I think you see one... it-it kind of veers.
- Okay.

And it's not
connected to the flame.

Look, it's below the flame.

- Okay, I'm...
- You see it moving?

- I'm gonna go backwards.
- And I saw it right there.

Yeah, no, it, it is moving up.

Okay, I'm going backwards.

- You know what? There it is.
- Oop, there it is.

There it is,
there it is. In the frame.

It is in this. Look, right here.

Yes, yes, yes, yes.

- Now it's gone.
- It's gone.

What the hell is that?

Well, that's strange.

Well, you see it go through.

Right here, there
is something here.

- Yes.
- Wow.

It's, like,
flashing or strobing, too.

Yeah.

- Right there.
- Yeah, I'm tracking it.

The high-speed footage

from last night's energy
experiment at the triangle

is truly incredible.

We recorded evidence
of a white orb-like UAP

right where the
flames that we shot

into the 31-foot-high
blob zone were split in two.

I can see it.

Now it's in the plume.

Well, I don't see it now.

Well, look, there
was clearly a thing

probably, you
know, 50, 60 feet up

comes down and-and we see it

kind of vanish
somewhere around 30 feet.

So that moves 30 feet
in less than a second.

So it's moving fairly fast.

It reminds me of when you guys

were out there with
the rocket that blew up.

Something very
similar showed up.

- Yep.
- This could be

a very similar phenomena.

Dragon was right.

When we first captured
images of the blob

that made our rocket
explode earlier this year,

we also saw a UAP in our
high-speed camera data

that looks just like this one
that we documented last night.

We're talking about
something showing up

right there at that
30 to 35-foot level

where we've had so many
other things show up or-or, frankly,

- things interacting with our rockets.
- Yeah.

There's something
physical going on there.

Absolutely.

We caught multiple UAPs emerging

and then disappearing
back into the blob zone

at the 31-foot level
above the triangle.

Where were they coming from,
and then, where did they go?

Was this more evidence
that supports the legends

about portals on the ranch
we've heard for years?

And could it be related
to the time anomalies

we documented two weeks ago?

We got enough
evidence now that says

there's something there,
and almost every time

we do a test, we find
some other little nuance

that we didn't realize
was there at the triangle.

And it was clear that we needed
more advanced technology

than ever before
to figure it out.

Well, one thing's for sure,

- we're not done probing that space.
- Nope.

Well, thanks
for the review, guys.

- How was the drive? Good, how are you?
- How we doing, sir?

I didn't know you was
bringing a whole baseball team.

So, after consulting
with Jay Stratton,

who not only
served as the director

of the federal
government's UAP task force

but also helped investigate
Skinwalker Ranch

back in the early 2000s,

he came back
with representatives

from a company known as OmniTeq,

including CEO Jim Royston,
who has over 20 years

of experience in the
aerospace and defense industry.

Thanks, you
guys. Thanks for coming.

These guys specialize

in data collection using all
kinds of high-tech equipment

on projects for the
Department of Defense, NASA

and other sensitive
government programs.

You guys remember
Jay, of course.

The OmniTeq team
brings us new opportunities

to really understand some of
this phenomenon on the ranch.

We're talking military
intelligence community-capable,

very expensive hardware

that's not readily
accessible to anyone else.

Really appreciate the
opportunity to come out.

From our A-team, I would say,

from the company here,
we have Shane Frazier,

communication specialist;
we have Sam Deriso,

who is former Navy nuke
and electronic warfare;

and then we have our
CTO, which is Tony Jamison,

former Naval
Intelligence, and also,

I'd say, data collection
and AI/ML specialist, also.

- So, that's the team.
- That's impressive résumés right there.

- Yep.
- One of the cool things,

a-and key things that Jay
and I have talked about

is these guys have
backgrounds in looking for signals

that are being hidden
or spoofed or jammed,

or electronic warfare,
and figuring out

what the useful information is.

And all of that is pertinent

to what's happening to
us out here at the ranch.

- Yep.
- So, what we want to do this afternoon

is set up antennas on
the triangle, looking up,

that will receive signals from
the International Space Station

as it passes over the ranch.

- Okay.
- Let's get to work.

- Yeah, sounds good.
- Okay, guys. Thank you.

Just like many satellites,

as the International Space
station orbits the planet,

it constantly sends a strong
radio signal back down to Earth.

So we're gonna use
high-powered antennas

to lock onto that
signal and track it

through the anomalous
zone as the space station

passes over the
ranch this afternoon.

Meanwhile, Jim Royston
is going to be flying

an advanced
drone-based lidar device

that will be scanning
through the anomalous zone

above the triangle
with infrared lasers.

So, if something
strange... like the blob...

Or some other phenomenon
breaks our connection

with the space station's signal,

- Well, let's test this.
- We're hoping

that the lidar will
be able to see it

and help us identify
just what in the heck it is.

- We'll fire it up.
- All right, so, this is gonna start

- tracking the space station, right, Sam?
- Right.

With all this
advanced technology,

hopefully, by the
end of the day,

we'll finally get some
answers about the triangle

and all the phenomena that
we keep experiencing there.

So, I've tracked
the station before.

- Yeah.
- This pass, what's it gonna be?

About a seven or
eight-minute track?

It's gonna be fairly short.
Actually, we acquire

the signal at 5:51
and we lose it at 5:59.

- So we've got eight minutes.
- Eight minutes.

Erik, you keep talking about

having billion-dollar
experiments.

My last count, the
space station would cost

something like
$70 billion, right?

Yeah. There you go.

- This is another one.
- This is a big experiment.

Yep. So, we
start to pick up the signal

- in about three minutes.
- Three minutes!

All right, we're green.

So, yeah, we'll
just be ready to go.

Space station, start tracking.

All right.

Any second now, any second now.

There it is.
Tracking the space station now.

- It's got it locked on?
- Yep.

- So, right here.
- There you go, Erik.

Erik's got it on his
spectrum analyzer, too.

We need to get the drone
up in the air right now.

Home point updated.

Check map to confirm.

ROYSTON?: So strange.

There was just a
big GPS data change.

Really?

It won't connect.

Okay, so we just
lost the space station.

Um...

- Are you getting it?
- No, it's not showing up right now.

When it got overhead,
we actually lost the signal.

- That's odd, isn't it?
- You see this?

There you
go, Erik. Erik's got it.

See these bumps?
That's the signal

being broadcast
from the space station.

What just happened?

Your system
just went completely away?

Right when the ISS
was over the triangle?

You got power.

Yeah, I've got light.

- And it won't reboot, Erik?
- No.

We had our experiment
with the team from OmniTeq

timed perfectly to connect
their antennas on the ranch

with the International
Space Station

as it traveled over the property

to try and identify
anomalies above the triangle.

The connection should have
lasted for almost ten minutes

as the space station
flew over the ranch,

but after only about a minute,

the connection
was inexplicably lost.

And at that exact moment,
Erik's and my computer systems

completely shut down.

That's two major anomalies,
as far as I'm concerned.

Hey, Travis.
On that space station?

- Yeah?
- We just had a big GPS change.

- Right now, it just did that?
- Just did that.

It's all our GPS
correction data.

So the base station
thinks it's moving around?

Yeah.
Just out of the blue.

Which, that's-that's
the first we've seen.

I can't... it won't
even take off,

My goodness.

It's incredible.

So to fly, we might
need to reboot that.

- Do what you got to do.
- Yeah.

Having these experts out here

and seeing them have the same
type of equipment malfunctions

that others have had?

This is the highest
tech equipment there is,

and they are
puzzled beyond belief.

Travis, we've got
something strong.

You have something?
What frequency?

So, well, it's at 1.6510.

- No kidding.
- Really?

- Straight up?
- But it's... Straight up.

- Straight up and it's strong.
- But it's-it's a constant signal.

When Tony detected the signal

at a frequency of 1.6 gigahertz,
Erik and I were stunned.

That's the signal we've been
detecting above the triangle

for the past four years.

Especially when we've seen
phenomena like UAPs appear.

- I-Is it meandering?
- No.

It's like a beacon.

Because
human technology does not

generally emit radio signals
at that specific frequency,

Erik and I have been
baffled by what or who

could be sending this
1.6-gigahertz signal,

and also, where in the
heck it was coming from.

Especially since
we've often detected it

here above the triangle.

There it is.

That's the space
station right there.

It's starting to show up
stronger and stronger,

- right there.
- Are you serious?

The funny thing
is, when it got overhead,

we actually lost the signal,

and now that it's past
us and it's, like, gone...

- Almost over the horizon to the south.
- Almost.

We picked it up
again and it's stronger now

after it's past us.

This was exciting.

So, OmniTeq lost
their connection

with the International
Space Station

as it passed over the triangle.

But then, once it
moved beyond that point,

it mysteriously reconnected
with their antennas,

suggesting that
there was something

floating above us and
blocking the signal.

All right, so, a lot of
stuff just went on here

with all of our different
instruments and everything,

so let's kind of recap

and understand exactly
what just happened.

We caught the ISS,
International Space Station,

right as it came
over the horizon.

And then when it
gets straight overhead,

we lost the signal
for whatever reason.

- Yeah.
- Right, when it's over the anomaly.

Then as the station tracks over,

we detect it again
and see it real strong

- as it goes over the horizon.
- That's right.

Your drone couldn't connect
to the GPS signals, right?

Yeah, it shut down.

- And then, Erik, what happened to yours?
- I had a total system crash.

A total system crash?

Yeah, the whole, the whole RF
spectrum analyzer went down.

So, l-look, at that,
at that instant,

we had so many
different malfunctions,

and then, just following that,

we saw a signal
at 1.651 gigahertz.

- Yes.
- So what this tells me,

now, is if there is something
going on right there now...

'cause we're having this
problem... I want to launch

- a rocket through it.
- Let's do it.

- All right. Are you gonna be able to get the lidar drone up?
- Yep.

- You think it's working now?
- It is right now.

Let's go.

Even though we lost
our ability to connect

with the International
Space Station,

when Jim said the lidar
device was finally operational,

I immediately wanted
to launch a rocket

up through the triangle while
he scanned the anomalous zone.

Check that out, Erik.
Real-time lidar point cloud.

- That is impressive.
- That's amazing.

My hope was
that we could stimulate

whatever may have
crashed all of our systems

to appear in the lidar, so then,

we could determine
what the heck it was.

You hot over there?

Yep, we're hot there.

So, get rea...
Everybody in position

- for rocket launches.
- Okay.

Launch in five,

four, three, two,

one.

Dude, that's a beautiful launch.

We caught it.

- It was amazing.
- Really?

So, I'll show you.

I thought we would
see just a tight little line

going up as the rocket.

It dispersed all the
points out really wide.

Meaning that the lidar points
around it moved out of the way?

Yeah.

What?

Wow. This was insane.

As the rocket ascended
up through the triangle,

according to the lidar,

it passed right through
something that dispersed

and split the lidar beam into
multiple wave-like patterns.

Once again, we have evidence

that there is
something invisible

in this anomalous zone.

Holy smokes.

That might be the blob.

Do you know what
elevation you were looking at

- when you saw the dispersion?
- Yeah, so,

we were seeing it probably
about 20 feet off the top there.

- Would that be about 30 feet above ground level?
- Maybe 30...

- Yeah.
- Just after something crashed

all our computer
systems at the triangle,

we launched a rocket up
through the anomalous zone.

And at about 30 feet high,

where we saw the blob
appear earlier this year,

OmniTeq's lidar scanner
showed that it penetrated

an invisible object that
caused the lidar data

to ripple like waves of water.

Was it the blob?

And if so, what
could that actually be?

- Wow.
- That is so in line

with what we've seen.

Yeah, at 30 feet.

At-at 30 feet, that's crazy.

So we need to
reproduce that, then.

You try to get the drone
right where you had it last time

for this second launch.

- Copy that.
- Yep, we're ready to roll.

- You guys ready?
- All right, we're ready to roll here,

- so you get in position.
- All right.

All right, well,
let's do this next one.

We've gotten
such interesting results

out of this first rocket launch

that I want to do it again.

Repeatability is an important
part of what we do out here.

We must launch a
rocket immediately.

Here we go,
rocket's ready to go.

All right, we're hot.

Rocket's going up... in five,

four, three,

two, one.

So, I'm not seeing anything.

- It didn't happen that time.
- I didn't see anything. -I don't see it.

- Nope, it didn't happen that time.
- I don't see it.

We didn't see anything.

I saw none of that
effect this time.

- Really?
- Yeah.

Travis, we didn't
even pick it up.

- There's no lidar.
- Like something blocked it right out.

Blocked it right out?
What do you mean?

- We didn't pick up that launch.
- Really?

Yeah.

- It's nothing.
- Nothing.

What?

How could OmniTeq's
lidar not see the rocket at all

as it ascended through the
31-foot zone above the triangle?

This was a
state-of-the-art technology.

It didn't make sense,
unless whatever caused

the ripples in the data
with the first rocket

actually cloaked or completely
masked the second one.

You might really want
to get back over there

to the command center and
review the high-resolution lidar data.

Absolutely. Let's get over
there and take a look at it.

- All right.
- Yeah.

- Hey, how we doing?
- Well, you know, as we're just talking,

I'm sitting here in
total suspense to see

what you've got from
all of the lidar data.

After the experiment,

Jim Royston and his
colleagues from OmniTeq

spent several hours
processing their lidar data

to much higher resolution.

So we couldn't wait
to see if that data

would reveal just what
caused the anomaly

that we witnessed 31
feet above the triangle.

You want to lead us into it?

Absolutely. So...

you know, obviously, we
saw some unique stuff happen

at the triangle, so...

Had some time to start
processing and looking at it.

This is what we
saw. So I'll plug this in

- so you guys can see it.
- Can we turn the TV on?

- Yeah.
- There we go.

So...

- What's the...
- What are we looking at here?

What is that spot?

For the last couple hours,

our team is trying to
look at this and say,

"Okay, what would
cause this void?"

Look at the
precise edges on that.

Of all the data we've
collected above the triangle,

OmniTeq's lidar identified
the clearest evidence yet

of something strange
right at the 31-foot level

where we saw the
blob earlier this year.

Just... So-so, is
this just missing data

or are... do we find the
data somewhere else,

- where it wouldn't normally be expected to be found?
- The only data we see

in this area, you
know, it's pretty dense.

So you go from, like,
really dense scan to nothing.

Wow.

It's like it absorbed
the lidar lasers.

Jim, please tell me you've seen

- this sort of thing before.
- No.

No. Neither has the team.

So, as you met, Sam
is, optical expert,

electronic warfare guy, looks
at all kinds of radar images,

and everybody's kind
of scratching their head,

to say the least,
over what this is.

Can you zoom way out?

- Whoa.
- Look at that.

- That's interesting.
- Yeah.

What is that red circle?

- What is this whole area?
- Yeah, what is that?

You've got a perfect
circle around it

- in high reflectivity.
- Wow.

The colors in
lidar data indicate reflectivity,

which is the percentage
of the laser light

returning to the sensor after
it bounces off of an object.

Yellows, greens and blues
would be less reflective

while the color
red is the indicator

of the highest reflectivity.

But the black just
made no sense.

It was like an open void.

So, given all the
anomalies and UAPs

we've seen above the
triangle, this made me wonder

if the legends about Skinwalker
Ranch could really be true.

It's-it's a shadow of something,

What is... what
are we looking at?

A black
hole? -Could be.

- Well, that could be...
- I mean...

a shadow of a wormhole.

- Whoa.
- Yeah, what is that?

Well, that could be a
shadow of a wormhole.

After all the bizarre
energy spikes,

possible communication signals,

UAPs that appeared and
then mysteriously vanished,

and other phenomena
that we've documented

at the triangle on
Skinwalker Ranch,

we've now collected lidar data

showing a perfectly
circular anomaly

surrounding another
shadowy anomaly

right above the triangle.

That's right over the launchpad,

and you're gonna be at
about 30 feet right there,

right where the
rockets have blown up.

It's almost like a
bull's-eye in the center

- where the black is.
- Yeah, it sure is.

- That is strange.
- A perfect circle.

- I mean, that's a perfect circle.
- That's what's amazing.

You could do curve fit on it

and that is a perfect circle.

- That's not a nat... a natural phenomena...
- No.

- We're looking at right there.
- No, it's not.

That's the most amazing
thing I've ever seen out here.

Something had to block

all those laser beams.

So it's either
something's in the way

and you... and it's,
and it's absorbing

all the stuff so it doesn't come back.

Right? Or it's
bending it elsewhere

- and it doesn't come back.
- And it's something with a very

unnatural geometry.

I mean, that's how stealth
fighters work, for radar.

And li... that's exactly
how stealth fighters work,

is the data just has
gone somewhere else.

So of all the lidar light

that hits the object,

the redder it is the
closer to 100% of all of it

- coming back to the lidar...
- Yep.

Is-is the reflectivity
measurement.

The red actually
means that was the spot

where you were
getting the best return?

- The most return, yeah.
- And so, as it gets closer

to the center,

- i-it's diminishing as it goes towards that.
- Yep.

You know, I-I'm picturing

another shape here.

I'm picturing a cylindrical...

an approximately
cylindrical zone

that flares out at
the top and below.

That's what I was
about to say, Erik,

I'm picturing two funnels
stuck together at the...

- Yes. Yeah.
- And you know what that is, guys?

That is a traversable
Lorentzian wormhole.

That is what
we're talking about.

If Erik is right, and
what we are seeing

is the bottom of a funnel-shaped
anomaly above the triangle,

that is exactly what
scientists have theorized

a traversable Lorentzian
wormhole, or a portal,

to another place in the
universe would look like.

Could that really be what
causes all the energy spikes,

the blob and UAPs

that we've seen appear
and then disappear there?

This would explain why
we didn't see the ISS.

We were tracking it straight out

before it was right
over the top of that.

This could
account for everything

that's happened at the triangle.

So you're saying
when the helicopter's straight ahead,

- but it's really over here to the south.
- It might, yeah.

- It's because the sight is coming down.
- Yeah.

You're bending,
bending the light.

And that's why we're
dropping bottles a mile away.

And they land, and they
land two miles to the south.

Wow.

And high-projectile rockets

going the other
direction and going off.

Yeah. Many of them.

Think about

all the stories we have of UFOs

flying into the
mesa at that spot.

Were they really
flying in or were they...

- Just going somewhere else?
- Would you say "travel"?

- Wow.
- Well, one way or the other,

something bent
the path of the light,

and we know that,
a hundred percent fact.

We know it's not
a failing device.

Something bent the light.

This has moved up
dramatically as far as...

- Priorities.
- Priority-wise,

this is where we're
gonna be allocating

- some of our resources, so...
- Yeah. Yeah.

It increases
my interest in the idea

of simultaneous rocket launches.

Like, if we were to
do a volley of, say,

four or six rockets
at the same time...

- Yeah.
- And they all behave that way,

or-or, for that matter, if
they, you know, deviate

and cross paths or something.

Yeah, I think
that's a great idea, Erik.

We definitely need to do that.

Well, your guys and your tech

have a standing invitation to
be here as long as you want.

Maybe we won't go home.

Thank-thanks so
much, Jim. It was awesome.

And I'm excited 'cause
this is just the beginning.

I mean, you guys are
just getting warmed up.

Yeah.

My God, is that not amazing?

I'm still trying to
get my head around it.

I can hardly believe
what I'm seeing.

It appears that there
is a very large region,

like a black hole in
the data right there

near the center of the triangle.

That leads to some very
interesting speculation.

We're talking about
something perhaps even

of exotic physics origins,

something redirecting
that infrared laser light

coming out of the
lidar system itself.

Are we seeing evidence of
a black hole or a wormhole?

I mean, we're all chasing
answers to those big questions.

Are we alone in the universe?
Are there others out there?

And what are these things
violating our airspace?

Going on four years
now, we've detected all sorts

of strange phenomena
over the triangle,

but the data we're collecting
is strongly suggesting

that the entire triangle
area could be an anomaly

that is beyond our
realm of understanding.

What we're seeing here
on Skinwalker Ranch

could truly change
science as we know it.

Are we dealing with portals?

Are we dealing with
wormholes at Skinwalker Ranch?

The data seems to
suggest that that may be

a plausible explanation for
a lot of the strange activity.

And what we're seeing
here at Skinwalker Ranch

is opening new
doors of understanding

and helping us better understand
our place in the universe.

We have had
another incident that shows

military surveillance

- over our property.
- Really?

We know there's something
going on up there over the triangle.

We're gonna launch
a lot of rockets.

Wait, Thomas, look.
Right-right there.

Cameron is seeing orbs.

It came right out of the mesa.

- What?
- My God.