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[#153762]
Written by: artistharry [21/02/11, 07:44] Action: [ Reply ] [ Quote ] |
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National Geographic - Nevada Triangle: Steve Fossett Mystery (2010) Information Nevada Triangle: Steve Fossett Mystery When record-breaking aviator Steve Fossett failed to return from a Sunday morning pleasure flight in September 2007, he sparked the biggest peacetime search and rescue operation in the history of the United States. Over the ensuing days and weeks, reports would surface of dozens of other missing airplanes in a huge triangular area of California and Nevada. Some of the planes dated back to the early days of flight, others from the Second World War and even more were uncovered in the restricted zones within the secretive Area 51. These disappearances sparked rumours of a mysterious region, similar to the Bermuda Triangle...now we seek to uncover the truth in Nevada Triangle: Steve Fossett Mystery. Technical Specs Video Codec: XviD ISO MPEG-4 Video Bitrate: 2039 kbps Video Resolution: 720 x 416 Video Aspect Ratio: 1.731 (16:9) Frames Per Second: 25 Audio Codec: 0x2000 (Dolby AC3) Audio Bitrate:128kb/s AC3 48000 Hz Audio Streams: 2ch Audio Languages: English RunTime per Part 46.mins Number Of Parts: 1 Part Size: 701 MB Source: DVB-rip (Nat-Geo HD) Encoded by: Harry65 |
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[#153800]
Written by: CthulhuSaves [21/02/11, 16:49] Action: [ Reply ] [ Quote ] |
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I'm not a skeptic or "doubter," per se, nor do I assume something's real without researching it and finding evidence. When it comes to "triangles" like this one, I find it interesting, but can't help but be reminded of a show I watched once. Basically, someone decided to "look outside the triangle," so to speak, and discovered that if you slap a border (of any shape) down on a map in just about any location, not only will you find missing aircraft reported (the premise being they disappear from time to time in any region), but that people will instinctively look for evidence within those borders, and simply not look for it outside of the marked area, thus creating the unintentional illusion that somehow the area itself is suspect. The show I mentioned, which I can't remember the name of now, did exactly that. They created a "somewhere triangle" (can't remember which area was chosen), pulled some missing aircraft info from within it, and began spreading the rumors. Sure enough, people latched onto it and effectively made it "real" by filling-in all the blanks with additional reports, etc. I think what I'd really like to see is simply a world map with all known disappearances marked on it with either big, black dots for single occurances, or numbers for multiple lost aircraft in a specific area (ie. the area marked would be the best estimate of where the plane lost contact or went down on its filed flight-path). If a map like that were to be put together, we'd be able to see once and for all if there really are any specific "areas" that have any statistical anomalies. |
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[#153801]
Written by: accounts [21/02/11, 16:51] Action: [ Reply ] [ Quote ] |
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I agree with CthulhuSaves, but I still downloaded it and ack I should not have, talk about grasping for straws.... |
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[#153833]
Written by: CthulhuSaves [21/02/11, 23:36] Action: [ Reply ] [ Quote ] |
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| Is it really that bad? I hadn't gotten around to pulling it down yet. | |||||
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