09 July 2011

Bell Island, Newfoundland, Canada "Mystery" Event Entry 2APR1978 2011 Booms are Meteors?

Bell Island "Mystery" Event Entry 2APR1978

Uploaded on YouTube by  on 20 Jan 2009 3,700 views

Wikipedia excerpt: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Island

Other Videos:

Bell Island Boom Part 1

Was it ball lightening or a test of a top secret electromagnetic weapon? What caused the explosive phenomenon on Bell Island, Newfoundland in 1978 ...
by MysteryBooms  2 years ago  15,399 views

Bell Island Boom Part 2

Was it ball lightening or a test of a top secret electromagnetic weapon? What caused the explosive phenomenon on Bell Island, Newfoundland in 1978 ...
by MysteryBooms  2 years ago  1,805 views

Bell Island Boom Part 3

Was it ball lightening or a test of a top secret electromagnetic weapon? What caused the explosive phenomenon on Bell Island, Newfoundland in 1978 ...
by MysteryBooms  2 years ago  1,271 views


The Bell Island boom
On April 2, 1978, there was a loud explosion on Bell Island which caused damage to some houses and the electrical house wiring in the surrounding area. Two cup-shaped holes about two feet deep and three feet wide marked the major impact. A number of TV sets in Lance Cove, the surrounding community, also exploded at the time of the blast. It was initially thought to be caused by ball lightning.[2] Meteorologists confirmed that atmospheric conditions at the time were not conducive to lightning. The boom was heard 55 kilometers away in Cape Broyle. The impact occurred in the Bickfordville area, on the southwestern side of the island. ...
The incident was investigated by John Warren and Robert Freyman from the Los Alamos National Laboratory (then called the Los Alamos Scientific Laboratory) of New Mexico, United States. It has been speculated that, due to the two men's place of work, they were investigating a secret weapons test and were military attachés. However, reacting to data received from the Vela satellites, they were in fact investigating a superbolt - an unusually large bolt of lightning, lasting an unusually long time: about a thousandth of a second.[3]... (more) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bell_Island