Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Big Green Orb and Its Swarm Pals Dominate the Sky

Photo date: August 17, 2015. Photographer: Mark Mahin.

The photo below shows the Schwarzman branch of the New York Public Library, with the Bank of America tower behind it. We see a strange swarm of orbs, including a large green orb.

big green orb
Once again, we see a very strong example of what I call "orb vertical bias" in the positioning of orbs. There are dozens of orbs above the library building, but only one orb in front of the library building. This is not at all what we would expect to see if we were seeing natural particles floating very near the camera lens, which would be randomly distributed around the photo area. See my posts labeled "orb vertical bias" for 10 similar examples showing very strong evidence of nonrandomness in the positioning of orbs.

The next photo was also taken at 9:09 PM.  We see the same "orb vertical bias," with none of the larger orbs in front of the building.


orbs in pictures

 Also at 9:09 PM I took the photo below, which shows some brighter orbs.  We see the same "orb vertical bias," with no orbs in front of the building.

orb swarm
The next photo I took (also at 9:09 PM) was of a piece of cardboard at arm's length. This showed no orbs, indicating that what I was photographing was not any type of natural particles near the camera. I have tried this "cardboard test" many times in the middle of photographing lots of orbs, and I have never seen one single orb in front of the cardboard when I did such a test. (See my posts labeled "cardboard test" for other examples.)

 The cardboard test and the "vertical bias" combine to provide very strong evidence that what we are seeing here is not natural particles (such as dust particles) near the camera.  We have here a mysterious unexplained phenomena.

There was no fog, mist, rain, or precipitation on this night. The air quality listed on airnow.gov was "moderate." I could not see or smell anything unusual nearby. The photos were taken with a full-spectrum camera that can detect radiation invisible to the human eye.

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