New Study Confirms Our Oceans are a Great Place to Hide Aliens
When something makes impact with the ocean, it slows down. Water is a lot denser than air, it's just a fact. Even a bullet slows when it goes from sky into water.
That's what made the UAP (Unidentified Aerial Phenomena) witnessed in Aquadilla, Puerto Rico on April 25, 2013 so strange. After flying around the Rafael Hernandez airport -- causing enough commotion to delay flights -- the spherical craft headed northwest over the ocean at 109.7 miles an hour, dove under the surface, and continued traveling underwater with no impact on its speed whatsoever. It defies physics.
This wasn't just based on the many eye-witness accounts. Pilots from U.S. Customs and Border Protection captured the whole thing on infrared video. Watching in real-time, investigators saw no change in the ocean surface when the UAP made impact. The team from the SCU (Scientific Coalition of UFOlogy) had to examine the video one frame at a time to discern any disturbance in the water at all. The UAP was completely indifferent moving through water or air. It was all the same.
This type of UAP is called transmedium by the U.S. Government's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO). It's a fancy way to say the craft was reported going from sky to ocean. While the vast majority of UAP sightings are typical flying objects, the most compelling, most documented, and still unexplained sightings involve transmedium UAPs.
Most recently was a sighting west of San Diego, California in July of 2019. The combat ship USS Omaha was over over open ocean, 100 miles from land. Just after 9PM, radar lit up with alerts. There were multiple unidentified flying objects in the sky. At one point radar identified fourteen. Speeds ranged from 40 to 158 miles an hour.
When deck crew members found them in the night sky, they witnessed glowing, spherical craft making impossible changes in speed and direction. Add to that, the UAPs had no visible wings or means of propulsion. Maybe they weren't alien, but they weren't any aircraft known to the Navy.
Suddenly, close to 11PM, the radar operator yelled, "it splashed!" Radar data later revealed multiple objects descended into the ocean. And exactly like the transmedium UAP in Puerto Rico, the objects entered the ocean without breaking up or slowing down. Sonar searches found no debris after the incident. This wasn't a crash. The craft were simply diving under, a normal maneuver for the abnormal craft.
Also like the Puerto Rico incident, the two hour UAP encounter was filmed. Forward Looking Infrared video from the USS Omaha confirms the witness accounts. And the Pentagon confirmed the video as authentic, including it in ongoing investigations by the AARO. To this day, the Navy has not identified what was in that video.
But for some reason, the ocean is not a focus of AARO, which aims to explain each and every UAP sighting in the name of the public good. The October 2023 AARO report analyzed 291 UAP incidents, and 290 were observed in the air only. One was in what's called the "maritime domain", seen only in the ocean. The number of new transmedium cases? Zero. AARO officials insist they don't have credible reports of transmedium UAPs. The truth may be that these cases aren't so easily dismissed as weather baloons, especially when they're filmed by Navy cameras.
We marvel at how UAP's could have travelled here across the vast distance of space. The nearest Earth-like planet is over 4 light-years away. Keep in mind, each light year is almost 6 trillion miles. If you got in a car and drove there at 60 miles an hour, it would take 48 million years to get there. Maybe alien craft arrived here once, but to keep making appearances? It may actually be impossible, the distances are that great. But what if we're simply looking in the wrong direction. Is it plausible alien ships and technology could exist in our oceans without our knowing it?
You'd think we would know what's on our ocean floor by now. But a new joint study from the Ocean Discovery League, the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, and Boston University reveals a stunning truth: we only have a visual record of 0.001% of the sea floor. Even worse, most of those visuals are low-resolution black and white images taken on deep dives forty years ago. And the vast majority of these images are concentrated within 200 miles of the U.S., Japan, and New Zealand.
Simply put, the High Seas -- oceans not part of territorial seas and beyond national jurisdiction - are a mystery when it comes to what lies at the depths. Those waters represent 64% of the ocean - basically half the Earth's surface.
That leaves a lot of space for craft that can navigate just as easily in sea as in the air. The few transmedium craft filmed by infrared cameras may just be the tip of the iceberg.