Lucid Dreams and Saturn Skies The Life and Writing of Andrew Kincaid

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Lights in the Sky–The Scandinavian Ghost Rockets

An alleged ghost rocket. Many suspect the object was a meteor.

An alleged ghost rocket. Many suspect the object was a meteor.

The year was 1946. One year previous, the most devastating war in human history reached its bloody conclusion. A good portion of the world lay in ruins, with millions dead and millions more displaced. While the embers of the previous war had not yet died out, the fires of a new one were growing–what we know today as the Cold War between the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics.

The former allies were not shy about looting the corpse of the Nazi Empire for whatever scientific knowledge they could get their hands on. Both sides shuttled Nazi scientists and weaponry back home to aid their own research programs. While the United States was the only country at the time with nuclear weapons, fears that the USSR would not be far behind were rampant. The scramble to secure rocket and other technology, stoked by fears of Soviet military power, laid the underpinnings of the arms race that would characterize the next fifty years of world history.

It was against the backdrop of war and the threat of war that reports of mysterious objects began coming out of Sweden, and later other Scandinavian countries. Eye witnesses reported seeing strange, missile-like objects in the sky. The objects zipped through the sky at incredible speeds, completely silent. They appeared to lack wings or any discernible aerodynamic features. A few reports described cigar-shaped objects moving at lower speeds, accompanied by  a low rumbling sound. Most of the objects flew horizontally, and they followed the large features of the ground below them.

No one in the Swedish government could figure out what the things were. Many sightings were attributed to  meteors, but not all could be explained away. All told, between May and December of 1946, there were 2000 sightings of strange lights in the Scandinavian sky, some of them accompanied by radar signatures. One of the first assumptions officials  made was that these strange objects were the test firings of rockets, possibly from the Soviet Union. That brought the US and the British into the mix, but the western Allies couldn’t turn up much themselves.

The rocket test hypothesis was pretty reasonable, given the time period. The Soviets did occupy Peenemunde, which was a secret German test site where V1 and V2 rockets were developed and tested. However, later research in the Soviet archives,  presumably after the fall of the USSR in 1989, showed that the captured German equipment was moved to Poland, and the Soviets never tested rockets at Peenemunde. Plus, the ghost rockets exhibited behavior that wasn’t feasible given the state of rocket technology in 1946. There was nothing at the time that could fly without apparent aerodynamic features like fins, nor was there anything that could follow ground features like the ghost rockets. Many of the objects sighted looked and acted like modern cruise missiles, but no one had that kind of technology at the time Also, some objects were seen to perform hairpin turns and maneuver in formation, something even modern cruise missiles can’t do.

Several of the objects were said to crash, lending credence to the idea that the sightings were of a top secret missile test program. After all, failures of some sort are expected with any new technology. However, investigations of crash sites turned up little more than craters and some bent vegetation.

So what were the ghost rockets? Nobody really knows for sure. They are quite literally UFOs–unidentified flying objects. Be they the results of top secret missile testing, mis-identification, or something of a less Earthly variety, we aren’t going to know anytime soon.

Project SUNSHINE, or the Time When Your Government Became Bodysnatchers

US Atomic Energy Commission LogoThe Cold War was a strange, strange era. The U.S. and the USSR jockeyed for supremacy in every field, but no field of the simmering conflict was fiercer nor more potentially disastrous than the competition to build a better Bomb. Both sides engaged in atmospheric nuclear tests until the Nuclear Test Ban Treaty of 1963, when both sides agreed to a moratorium on the practice.

What could bring two opposing super powers to the table to make such a historical agreement? Well, both sides increasingly worried over the effect nuclear fall out was having on the biosphere. These days we take for granted our understanding of radiation and its dangers, but it is good to bear in mind that back in the Cold War, especially in the late 40′s clear through the 60′s, there was a lot we didn’t know about radiation and how it might effect people and the environment.

That of course didn’t stop us from detonating hundreds of nuclear weapons out in the deserts of the Southwest, and out in the Pacific. Still, the Atomic Energy Commission was interested in discovering just how nasty radiation could be to the biosphere. So they commissioned Project GABRIEL to discover the impact of radioactive fallout. The study found that Strontium-90 was the worst culprit in terms of its impact on biology. The next step was to figure out the impact of radiation on the world’s population, which led the AEC to commission the innocuously named Project SUNSHINE in 1953.

That’s where things started to get ghoulish.

You see, the goal of the project was to figure out the global dispersion of Sr-90. To do this, the researchers measured the concentrations of the isotope in dead flesh and bones, particularly the remains of infants as their growing bones accumulate Sr-90 more readily. Now that sounds bad enough, but when you get into science you’re used to dealing with weird stuff. Besides, it wasn’t like the researchers just went out and yanked bodies out of graves without telling anyone, right? …right?

Wrong, unfortunately. This is a quote from AEC Commissioner Willard Libby: “So human samples are of prime importance and if anybody knows how to do a good job of body snatching, they will really be serving their country.”

So, yeah. A government agency actively engaged in body snatching for God and Country. If that’s not mad science, I don’t know what is.

The Georgia Guidestones–America’s Stonehenge

The Chinese and Arabic inscriptions on the Georgia Guidestones.

Set among rolling green hills, a strange granite structure rises up from the surrounding woods and farmland.  It is composed of huge, granite slabs covered in a cryptic message that is related in eight different languages.  The entire structure is configured to a precise astronomical alignment: a slot in the capstone tracks movement of the sun throughout the year, a hole in the capstone marks the noon hour, and a channel carved in the stone points to the celestial pole.  This strange monument has attracted attention from conspiracy theorists and religious authorities alike for its strange message to posterity.

From it’s description, you might be thinking that this monument is located in some ancient land; England, or perhaps deep in Romania or the Ukraine.  You would be wrong; it is located right here in the good ole United States of America, specifically in the state of Georgia.  Hence its name–the Georgia Guidestones, also known as “America’s Stonehenge”.

The Guidestones were commissioned in June of 1979 by a man under the pseudonym R.C. Christian, who hired the Elberton Granite Finishing Company to do the work.  Nobody knows the real identity of R.C. Christian, but if the inscription “Let these be guidestones to an Age of Reason” is any indication, the motivation behind the monument was clear enough.  The Guidestones bear ten principles to achieve this end, engraved in granite in eight modern languages: English, Spanish, Swahili, Hindi, Arabic, Chinese, and Russian.  The principles are as follows:

  1. Maintain humanity under 500,000,000 in perpetual balance with nature.
  2. Guide reproduction wisely — improving fitness and diversity.
  3. Unite humanity with a living new language.
  4. Rule passion — faith — tradition — and all things with tempered reason.
  5. Protect people and nations with fair laws and just courts.
  6. Let all nations rule internally resolving external disputes in a world court.
  7. Avoid petty laws and useless officials.
  8. Balance personal rights with social duties.
  9. Prize truth — beauty — love — seeking harmony with the infinite.
  10. Be not a cancer on the earth — Leave room for nature — Leave room for nature.

It’s pretty easy to see why there is controversy around the Guidestones, considering that it says we should maintain the global population at a small fraction of its current level.  It also has fairly controversial ideas about national sovereignty, calling for not only a global language but a one world government and, apparently, a shared global spirituality.  Proponents of traditional religion naturally are going to be against these ideas.  In researching this post I read a rather hysterical article by a minister who claimed that the Guidestones were the blueprint of the New World Order.  Not exactly a rational response there, especially considering nobody seems to be chomping at the bit to enact these principles at the moment.

While it’s hard to say for certain what R.C. Christian intended with his Guidestones, I think it’s important to take the timing of the construction in context.  The Cold War was still on, and a nuclear war between the Superpowers was a very real possibility.  Maybe Christian’s intention was not for his principles to be implemented in our time but in a post apocalyptic future when the population of the human race would be greatly reduced and civilization was on the brink of collapse, if not already over the edge.  It was probably meant to be a guide to build a better civilization, one that would be less likely to destroy itself than our own.

Or, it could have simply been a gimmick to bring tourists to Elbert County.  Maybe.  The only one who really knows is R.C. Christian, and he doesn’t seem to be talking these days.

Ghosts of the Cold War–The Lost Cosmonauts

Sputnik 1

This is a replica of Sputnik 1 from the National Air and Space Museum. It was the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth.

The Cold War is a fascinating time in our history, when the United States and its allies were united against the Soviet Bloc, consisting of the Soviet Union, its satellite states, and its Communist allies.  The lands beyond the Iron Curtain were a mystery to most Americans, a giant red enigma frightening in its size and implacable in its intent.  This combined with the frantic efforts on both sides to one up each other in nearly every sphere of endeavor–especially technology–led to the strange story of The Lost Cosmonauts.

To understand this legend, we must begin with the first artificial satellite to orbit the Earth–Sputnik 1.  Needless to say that the thought of a Soviet made machine orbiting high over head with intents unknown was traumatic for America and her allies, but it wasn’t a pair of American amateur radio operators who took the initiative to snoop on the satellite but rather Italians.  The brothers Achille and Giovanni Judica-Cordiglia, using surplus American equipment, managed to pick up the monotonous radio transmission issuing from Sputnik 1.  This feat made them something like local celebrities, a fame that grew when they made the sensational claim that they had caught horrific signals from failed Soviet manned space missions.

These alleged transmissions were first recorded in May of 1960, when the brothers claimed to have heard a manned space craft issuing a distress signal that it had gone off course.  Later that same year came an even more disturbing signal–an SOS in Morse code that faded over time, suggesting that its craft of origin was moving away from the Earth.  From then on the claims became even more sensational and disturbing.  One recording allegedly captured a dying cosmonaut’s fading heart beat and ragged final breaths as he suffocated to death in his capsule.  Another recorded a female cosmonaut’s frantic final signals as she burnt up upon reentry.  There were several more that involved cosmonauts flying off into the void of space after their equipment failed or after their capsules skidded off the Earth’s atmosphere like a flat rock across the surface of a pond.

If true, the implications are horrifying.  Few deaths could be more terrible than being lost in the vastness of Deep Space in a capsule about the size of a small car, slowly suffocating as you use up your last oxygen reserves.  I can see why Westerners at the time would find this scenario believable–after all, everyone knew how small a premium the Communist countries put on human life, their compulsive tendency toward secrecy, and they also knew (to a lesser extent) how crazy dangerous the space program was.  It was a simple enough matter to put two and two together and surmise that the Soviet space program must have been like a meat grinder.  But how true was that, really?

Certainly, more people died in the Soviet program than their American counterparts.  Most of these deaths didn’t come out until after the Soviet archives were opened after the collapse of the Soviet Union in the early 90′s.  But it would be inaccurate to say that the Soviets simply threw cosmonauts through the proverbial wood chipper until they could get their rockets working properly.  A cursory examination of this notion shows how ludicrous it is–after all, both astronauts and cosmonauts were highly trained professionals.  It’d be insane to sacrifice them recklessly simply by virtue of their expertise, let alone the fact that they’re human beings.

But a look at the alleged transmissions themselves and the stories around them shows they were little more than sensationalism.  For one, any vehicle undergoing reentry is under radio silence, since rocketing through the atmosphere at several hundred miles an hour sort of results in a lot of radio interference.  Second, most of the vehicles said to be zooming out of the Earth’s orbit were incapable of going fast enough to achieve escape velocity from Earth’s orbit.  But let’s say these vehicles had actually achieved orbit.  Unless some outside force had worked on them or they fired their rockets (which as I said at the time couldn’t achieve escape velocity) they wouldn’t just suddenly whip out of orbit. Once you’re in orbit, there are only two ways to go unless worked upon by an outside force–you either remain stationary or starting heading back down to Earth.

Suffice it to say, it doesn’t seem very likely that there are any lost cosmonauts zooming through the endless blackness of space.  This dark story is nothing more than a fantasy born out of Cold War paranoia and a pair of brothers in search of fame.

The Twilight Zone (Original Series)

The Twilight Zone was a Sci-fi/horror/Thriller anthology series created by Rod Serling in 1959.  It is considered by many a classic piece of television, and iconic in the horror genre

There is a fifth dimension, beyond that which is known to man. It is a dimension as vast as space and as timeless as infinity. It is the middle ground between light and shadow, between science and superstition, and it lies between the pit of man’s fears and the summit of his knowledge. This is the dimension of imagination. It is an area which we call the Twilight Zone.
—Rod Serling

The Twilight Zone is a classic piece of television, and it really set the benchmark by which any sci-fi or horror television series (especially if they are anthologies) are judged against.  Probably right now the iconic theme is in your head–even people who have never watched the show have likely heard it, it’s imitated so often.

It used to be that you might catch a few episodes here and there on the Sci-Fi Channel (I refuse to call it SyFy because…really?)  but now what with Netflix and Hulu it’s much easier to find.  Over the past few months, I’ve had the pleasure of watching seasons 1-5 (minus season 4, for some reason) on Netflix.  I’d seen a few episodes here and there during Sci-Fi marathons, including a few classic episodes such as “Time Enough At Last”, where Burgess Meredith (better known as Rocky’s manager in the first three Rocky movies) plays a man who likes to read, and after a nuclear war finally finds the time, and “Nightmare at 20,000 Feet” where a young William Shatner sees a terrible creature on the wings of a plane.

Seeing those classics, I knew I like The Twilight Zone and I was excited to get to experience the rest of the series.  I was impressed by how edgy the show was, given the time period in which it was made.  It featured a lot of scathing social commentary, using sci-fi/horror themes to illustrate (and conceal from censors) its point.  “Monsters on Maple Street” is a perfect example of The Twilight Zone as social commentary.  It is about a neighborhood in a small town that sees strange lights and hears word that aliens have come down in human form.  Paranoia takes over, and soon the neighborhood devolves into panic and violence.  Another such episode whose name I can’t recall centers around a family who has a bomb shelter in a neighborhood of people who did not.  The authorities come over the airwaves with the warning that a nuclear attack is under way, and what once looked like a neighborhood straight out of a Norman Rockwell becomes a place of fear, panic, and the animal instinct to survive at all costs.

Not every episode of The Twilight Zone is quite so weighty.  Many are moralistic fables, many of which are intended to be humorous.  One hallmark of the series is the ironic, often horrific twist featured in nearly every episode.  The Twilight Zone beat M. Night (What a Twist!) Shymalan to the punch by fifty years, and more often than not this show does it better than ole Shymalan ever could, outside of The Sixth Sense that is.  Not every episode is great–like any anthology, the stories can be a bit hit or miss–but when The Twilight Zone gets it right, well, there’s a reason it’s considered classic television.

The Big One – The Tsar Bomba

The Tsar Bomba was the largest thermonuclear device ever detonated.  The weapon was tested in the USSR in 1961 as a show of force.

A replica casing of the Tsar Bomba, on display in a Russian museum.

Naturally, since I often write about supernatural horror in my fiction, I write a fair bit about paranormal subject matter on this blog.  I find it interesting to look at all the strange stories people tell each other in order to elicit a scare. These stories, in my mind at least, reveal a fair bit about people, more than they reveal about the natural world at any rate.

Today, however, we will be discussing horrors of a different sort, horrors that today may seem distant but only twenty or thirty years ago were all too real.  While today the threat of terrorism preoccupies the minds of those in the halls of power, not so long ago an even larger threat loomed larger over the lives of all Americans.

You see, before the 1990′s, the world was at war.  Certainly, it was a cold war, but that did not make the terror any less real.  Today’s generation laughs at the old “duck and cover” PSA’s, but fifty odd years ago that cutesy little song gave voice to very real fears of nuclear annihilation.  The world’s only two super powers built nuclear weapons at a feverish pace, constantly attempting to one up one another in terms of technology and the power of their weaponry. MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) kept the powers in check, but it also demanded that the rivals build up their weaponry almost in step with one another.  Even as the stockpiles of both conventional and nuclear weapons increased, both the USSR and the United States had their fingers on that big red button that, if pushed, would end the world as we know it.

The circumstances were ripe for one power or the other to build a weapon so stupendously powerful that, even today, it is a source of terrified awe.  The dubious distinction of having produced the most powerful weapon in history went to the USSR, in the form of the bomb widely nicknamed the Tsar Bomba.  Now, the Russians (and subsequently the USSR, which was comprised of 15 countries including Russia) had an obsession for big things.  Russians produced the Tsar Kolkol (Tsar Bell), the largest bell in the world, and the Tsar Pushka (Tsar Cannon), the largest cannon in the world.  It seems only fitting that the world’s largest country would have a propensity for making big things, and that said country would produce the largest nuclear weapon in history.

The fire ball resulting from the Tsar Bomba detonation, visible from hundreds of miles away.

A photograph of the fireball resulting from the Tsar Bomba detonation.

The Tsar Bomba was meant to be a show of force by the Soviet Union, and boy did it ever deliver.  The device was a three stage thermonuclear weapon.  An initial fission reaction involving Uranium-238 (the fissile material used in the bomb dropped on Hiroshima) would kick start the fusion of hydrogen, which would then result in further fusion reactions that would release immense amounts of energy.  The bomb weighed in at approximately 60,000 pounds (27 metric tons), measuring 26 feet (8 meters) long and 6.9 feet (2.1 meters) in diameter.  The weapon was so large that the plane carrying it, a Tu-95 heavy bomber, had to be modified in order to carry the bomb to its test site, a remote spit of land on the northern fringe of Russia.  Designers initially intended the bomb to have a yield of 100 megatons, but fears of excessive fall out led them to halve the yield to 50 megatons.

Whew.  Those are a lot of numbers.  Let’s put some things in perspective.  A megaton, when used in reference to explosive yield, refers to the explosive force of 1 million tons of TNT.  The Tsar Bomba, then, exploded forces equivalent to 50 million tons of TNT.  These numbers are very difficult for anyone to wrap their mind around, even a science guy who’s fairly accustomed to huge numbers.  So, I poked around a bit and found a few references that put just how ridiculously powerful this thing was.  I’m certain all of you recall that Hiroshima and Nagasaki were the first (and thank God, only) cities to suffer nuclear attack.  Both cities suffered unparalleled destruction within seconds of detonation, and tens of thousands were killed.  Well, the Tsar Bomba was 1400 times more powerful than the bombs dropped over both those cities COMBINED.

…holy crap.  I think that just blew my mind.

…anyway.  To say that the Tsar Bomba’s detonation was massive would be an understatement.  The bomb exploded 2.5 miles (4km) above the surface of the Earth.  Everything within about 22 miles (35km) of the blast was annihilated.  A fire ball about 2.5 miles (3.5km) seared the sky, resulting in a mushroom cloud 25 miles (40km)  wide at its base that  stretched 40 miles (64km) into the atmosphere.

Mushroom cloud resulting from a nuclear detonation

The mushroom cloud resulting from the test. It stretched miles into the upper atmosphere and had a 25 mile wide base.

Buildings for hundreds of miles around were destroyed or severely damaged in the resulting shock wave.  The blast wave shattered windows as far away as 560 miles (900 km) away.  The heat generated by the blast was enough to cause 3rd degree burns 62 miles (100km) from the blast site, and the fireball was visible 620 miles (1000km) away.  The shock wave circled the globe three times before finally dissipating.

If such a weapon were dropped over a populated area, the results would be unthinkable.  The Tsar Bomba would not be a city destroyer, but a region destroyer.  A weapon of such magnitude could disrupt the function of an entire country, rendering a huge swath of land uninhabited within seconds.  The fact that the Tsar Bomba was the cleanest nuclear weapon ever detonated (the fission phase was limited to cut the production of radioactive fallout) would be of little comfort for those caught within its huge destructive radius.  With only a few modifications (and a huge increase in weight), the Tsar Bomba could have been made to yield 100 megatons, which would have resulted in a much “dirtier” explosion.

Luckily, such a weapon was not feasible.  The Tsar Bomba was simply too large and too powerful to be a usable weapon.  A great deal of the energy of the explosion was released into the atmosphere, and the weapon was so heavy that there was no feasible way to deliver it.

Of course, that shouldn’t leave you feeling too relaxed.  While no weapon is as massive as the test device detonated in 1962, warheads with half that yield have been successfully mounted to intercontinental ballistic missiles (ICBM’s) that can be launched to any point in the world within a few moments.  As if that is not terrifying enough, there are ICBM’s mounted with multiple, targeted warheads that can essentially carpet bomb a region with nuclear death.  If anything, nuclear technology has become more deadly since the most powerful weapon in history was detonated.

Check out a video of the test here.


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