Aerial Anomalies
Angel Hair
Angel Hair so named because of its delicate, glittery, and white hair-like appearance. As with crop circles and cattle mutilations there is an association with angel hair and UFOs. Although nothing is known about the true origin or purpose of this anomaly, there are consistencies in the sightings. It is either seen floating from the sky or found clinging to trees and structures in such a manner as to make a sky drop obvious. Very few samples have been obtained because the substance literally melts when touched, when handled it becomes gelatinous, then vaporizes into the air. There is no apparent reason for falls, sometimes covering square miles.
There are many theories about the source of angel hair, with the bulk of the suspicion going to migrating spiders, mainly due to the spider web-like delicacy. This would not even be reasonable if spiders migrated at low altitudes, due to the immense quantity, and the fact that spiders don't just pump out great quantities of web for no reason. Spider migrations are a high altitude affair for one very good reason, as they can't fly. They ride the thermals up into the upper atmosphere, and glide along with the prevailing winds. Even if they did produce webs on these migrations the turbulence would be more than sufficient to disperse them. And of course how many spider webs turn to goo at the touch.
Another theory has the angel hair being produced in the funnels of tornados through a combination of dust particles and organic materials, high electron current, and high gas velocity. Supposedly this is all spun into threads by centrifugal force of the spinning column of air because charged particles would tend to form long chains of filaments. After falling to the ground, the filaments would lose the electrical charge and disintegrate into fine dust. This is only slightly more palatable than spiders.
Sightings of odd patterns with very specific in designs are often reported and strands of angel hair up to 50 feet long have been found. Another odd characteristic is that angel hair is as volatile as cellophane when exposed to a flame. Scientific analysis has concluded that angel hair begins to degrade when exposed to oxygen. The structure contains silicon, magnesium, calcium and boron.
A most interesting report of tiny filaments discovered on clothing, which brightly fluoresced under a black light suggested phosphorus or barium titanate microfilaments or polymers possibly emanating from persistent contrails or other atmospheric source.
There is no reasonable means of determining the true number of Angel Hair drops because of the almost natural appearance of the phenomenon. Surely it is even less reported than UFO sightings, which it is estimated are only reported 1% of the time. Here are a few Angel Hair reports.
1741
1914
1950
1952
France, in At Oloron, in October, the high school superintendent Jean-Yves Prigent, together with his wife and children, witnessed a strange event. To the north they saw a fleecy cloud, of curious shape, floating along. Above it was a long, narrow cylinder, tilted at an angle of 45 degrees and slowly heading southwest, at an estimated altitude of 2,000 to 3,000 meters. The object was whitish in colour and its shape was quite distinct. Puffs of white smoke were coming from its topside. Some way ahead of the cylinder about 30 other objects were traveling on the same course. When viewed with field glasses, each of these objects was seen to have a red ball at the centre, surrounded by a yellowish ring. These objects traveled in pairs in short, swift zigzags. When two of them moved apart they seemed to be connected by a whitish trail. All of these objects left long trails, which disintegrate and drifted slowly to the ground. A white, hair like substance rained down from all of the objects, wrapping itself around telephone wires, tree branches, and the roofs of houses. When observers picked up the material and rolled it into a ball, it turned into a gelatin like substance and vanished. One man, who had observed the episode from a bridge, claimed the material fell on him, and he was able to extract himself from it only by cutting his way clear. A nearly identical series of events occurred in Gaillac, France, ten days later.
1953
Australia. "While cycling along a street in the Melbourne suburb of Caulfield a white, hair like substance rained down from all of the objects, wrapping itself around telephone wires, tree branches, and the roofs of houses. When observers picked up the material and rolled it into a ball, it turned into a gelatin like substance and vanished.
1954
On October 22, Principal
Mr. Rodney Warrick and students watched with astonishment as "a large, silvery,
cigar-shaped object" hanging in the sky suddenly took off "in a horizontal
trajectory". In its wake, this object left a trail of white web-like substance,
which floated down and hung on the wires along the road. It was reported to have
descended in both strands and balls.
Australia, Shepparton, Victoria. "Mr. Ramon Estrada, of Shepparton, reported that at 4pm on May 12th 1954, he happened to see silk-like threads floating down from the sky. He also saw several long strands of this material sailing north. The average length of these strands was thirty feet. At 4.30 pm there was a similar occurrence, only the number of strands was doubled. Mr. Estrada gathered some of these filaments and although they became wrinkled, they did not disintegrate. In an airtight container he sent a sample of this mysterious substance to the headquarters of AFSB, which, in its subsequent report, said that the substance was pure white in colour, silky in formation, though harder in texture. It was odorless, warm on touch like cotton, and different from cobwebs, which, after a time, are sticky and grey. A microscopic examination revealed a mass formation of uniform threads of a very fine type. A comparison with the microscopic analysis of cobwebs showed that the Shepparton filaments were coarser. There was some resemblance to white raw silk or even nylon. The ‘Cosmic Silk’ was highly susceptible to the disintegrating action of the atmosphere and the sample had to be kept in a tightly closed container. The substance did not dissolve in water. A test in a strong caustic soda solution caused the matter to disappear momentarily. It burned rapidly, leaving no smell or ash unlike wool, cotton, silk or cobwebs. The threads were not sticky, or oily but dry. Like silk they stretched easily at the ends as little hairs were detached from the spool. The most important characteristic was the length of the original strands coming down from the sky, which averaged thirty feet.
1956
Australia, Melbourne,
Victoria. "Millions of gossamer threads draped Melbourne’s seaside suburbs and
hung from wire and trees, but then completely vanished in a few hours. A
Commonwealth Industrial Organization studied and tested them with ethyl acetate,
acetone and lacto phenol dye. They magnified the threads 100 diameters, burned,
and melted them. They decided that the threads were not wool, did not come from
feathers, were not cotton, nor did they appear to be any known synthetic fiber."
1959
1961
Australia. "I am a Shearing Contractor aged 37 years and am at present working at Mt Hale station which is situated about 70 miles west of Meekatharra. My home address is (deleted). About 8.20 am on the 5th August, 1961, Mr. (deleted) Mt Hale Station came over the shearing shed and asked me to have a look at two objects in the sky. The objects were round in shape, bright silver, about 2 feet each in diameter that is from ground level. The objects appeared to be about 8 to 10,000 feet, possibly higher. They were traveling at a fast speed and could be kept in sight for only about two minutes. Their course appeared definite, no surface wind. In all 12 objects were sighted, the last being about 9.15 a.m. They appeared to be in pairs. The objects gave off a white substance, which took on various shapes whilst falling to the ground. The white substance was followed and I managed to pick up some of the substance, It was of snow white colour and appeared to be in a fine mesh. It crumbled very easily.
1962
Canada, Montreal. This report was made on the deck of the M.V. Roxburgh Castle, moored at Montreal on 10 October 1962, while the Roxburgh Castle was moored to her berth in Montreal, I was walking around outside my accommodation and noticed fine white filaments of unknown kind hanging around stanchions and topping lift wires of derricks. Calling the attention of the Chief Officer, 1 pulled one of these strands from a stanchion and found it to be quite tough and resilient. l stretched it, but it would not break easily (as for instance a cobweb would have done), and after keeping it in my hand for 3 or 4 minutes it disappeared completely; in other words, if just vanished into nothing . Looking up, we could see small cocoons of the material coating down from the sky, but as far as we could ascertain there was nothing either above or at street level to account for this extraordinary occurrence. Unfortunately 1 could not manage to preserve samples of the filaments as the disappearance took place so quickly.
1968
Australia, Brinkley.
Web-like strands, up to a chain in length, floated down like snow, on a farm
belonging to Mr. R A Kennett. He said that it was similar to asbestos rope of
pencil width, which stuck to soil and twigs.
Australia, Cheltenham Adelaide, South. Web-like "fine woven cotton" was seen on a lawn and draped over wires and a fence.
1969
1971
Australia, Christies Beach
Adelaide South Australia. Five silver objects were seen. Four of these were in
a "box" formation, i.e. forming the corners of a square, and a fifth leading.
Filaments were reported falling.
Maslins Beach South Australia. Between 3.10 and 3.50pm Mr. Matthews of Maslins Beach sighted objects described in the AFSRS Newsletter in the following terms: silvery white, globular, moving (a) rapidly west to east, (b) almost stationary. Some were rising until they disappeared. Some appeared to be double, joined together by a cord or thread. These double objects moved around each other in an apparently aimless pattern. Near the ground were a lot of pieces of what looked like white "fairy floss." When picked up and handled, this tended to "melt" or "disappear.’" It was extremely light and tenuous, and sometimes seemed to be made up of white strands, extremely thin. Some of the very high objects moved from west to east. Some in other directions. Some changed direction. The high ones went higher and disappeared. It was a perfectly cloudless day, bright sunshine. Absolutely no wind at ground level. "Small pieces were floating in our garden later."
1972
1973
Sudbury, Massachusetts, a child ran into the house calling to his mother to come outside to see "the biggest spider web in the world". The mother discovered in her yard a silvery-white web-like material covering bushes and hanging from the trees. As she looked toward the sky, she witnessed a shiny, silvery, spherical object moving off to the west as more of this web-like substance fell from the sky for another 2 hours. The witness took samples on construction paper and placed them in a glass jar and into the refrigerator taking them to a local laboratory for examination. The material was white and translucent and diminishing rapidly.
1983
1998
1999
Esperance, Western
Australia. "A man witnessed tonnes of white filamentous threads falling from
the sky. Paddocks, hedges, trees were covered with the stuff and it hung off
power lines in great shrouds with lengths up to thirty feet long. Apparently
the sky was thick with it up to a thousand feet or more. There was no wind. The
threads fell from 10am to 3pm. All the paddocks in the area had a "sheen" caused
by layers of the stuff. Peter, the witness, picked up some of the "hair" to
try and get it analyzed. A Cessna aircraft was flying around as low as 200 ft
through the falling threads. Three contrails were stationary much higher, one
with a spiral in it.
2000
Aldinga, South Australia.
A man spotted a silver disk in the sky, and called out his wife to look at it.
Over the next 90 minutes they saw an additional three whitish balls and three
things looking like a helicopter in shape, making a total of six to nine objects
in all travelling west to east. The sky was completely cloudless at the time,
with the temperature being mild. From the sighting of the first object there was
a fall of material. Sheila stated that it fell in large wads/strands. She used a
stick to pick up some of the material, which fell onto her house and TV antenna
and gatepost. The material was long, silver, cobweb like in colour and texture.
Once touched with the stick it shriveled up and evaporated. No sound was heard.
North Texas. "I awoke to a thick almost dusty colored fog along the bottom land near my house. As the sun began to rise, this eerie fog began to lift -- the sky above the fog was clear and the top of the dusty fog looked white and wispy similar to some of the wispy cirrus-like clouds associated with persistent contrails. This fog rose in a matter of minutes revealing small white fluffy almost cotton ball looking material all over the tall weeds in the area. These balls looked to be about 2-3 inches in diameter and literally vanished as the sunlight hit them."
On Thursday afternoon, September 28, m a male jogger was out running in Livonia, Michigan, a suburb 15 miles (25 kilometers) west of Detroit, when he spied something weird on the grass. "Yesterday I collected the largest amount of angel hair I have ever seen," he reported, "I literally ran into it while outrunning. It was spread across the grass near a drainage ditch, under a tree that looked like a weeping willow. I had never seen the stuff before, in person, only photos and stories on the Internet." ""But I found it and collected all of it, and I have a large sample of it inside a Ziploc (plastic) bag. It feels like cat fur, but it has a static cling to it. All of the hairs cling to each other in the bag. There are no stray hairs floating around. When I put my hand down on the grass to pick some up, it just came up against my hand like static cling almost." ""I (had) decided to go out running and at first ran past it, then stopped and turned around to look more closely." "It was obvious it had blown from a northerly direction. It was only a small patch, about three feet (0.9 meters) wide. I picked it all up and stuck it in the pocket of my jogging sweatshirt, then ran up to the nearest grocery store to get a plastic bag to put it in." "I thought it would disintegrate like everyone says, but it didn't. It's still right there, in the Ziploc. Maybe because there's so much of it, it all just stuck to each other. Weird!"
Italy, Vercellese and Alessandri, two towns in the Piemonte region of northern Italy, heard an unusually loud boom. This "sky quake" rattled roof tiles and windows in both communities. Immediately afterward, the residents saw "long sheer white filaments drifting down from the sky." The fibrous material fell most heavily in Vercellese but was also reported on the farms surrounding the town. "The filaments were clearly 'angel's hair' or 'hair of the Virgin,' as it is called here in Italy, and it is usually associated with UFO phenomena," reported Italian Ufologist Paolo Toselli, "Similar phenomena have also been reported in the United States.
For some very good
pictures and a lab report go to:
http://www.homestead.com/rustys_retreat/spiderstuff.html
Another interesting lab analysis can be found here:
http://tracers.8m.com/ah.htm
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