France Is a Major UFO Hotspot | Ancient Aliens | The UnXplained Zone
Analysis Summary
Summary
In Vernon, France, on August 24, 1954, multiple eyewitnesses reported seeing oval-shaped craft above the Seine River. These crafts moved at high speeds and vanished suddenly. Journalist Aimé Michel studied these sightings and noticed they followed straight lines, which he called orthoteny. He published his findings in 1958, suggesting that UFO activity often occurs along specific paths related to Earth's magnetic forces. Additionally, researcher Ivan T. Sanderson identified areas known as UFO hotspots, including the Bermuda Triangle, where ships and planes have disappeared. These hotspots share a unique geometry and magnetic anomalies, suggesting a connection between them and potential extraterrestrial activity.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The video discusses various UFO sightings and patterns identified by researcher Aimé Michel in the 1950s, including the concept of orthoteny. It also explores the Bermuda Triangle and its connection to UFO hotspots, as identified by Ivan T. Sanderson, suggesting a potential link between these phenomena and Earth's magnetic anomalies.
Aimé Michel introduced a principle he called orthoteny, which held that clusters of UFO activity over a short period of time usually occur along straight lines that often intersect.
Aimé Michel
“He saw that they actually use specific lines which he felt were connected with the magnetic forces of the Earth.”
Ivan T. Sanderson
“He was able to identify, he believed, certain spots, like the Bermuda Triangle, the Dragon's Triangle.”
Numerous eyewitnesses report several mysterious oval-shaped craft above the Seine River traveling at great speeds before suddenly vanishing into thin air.
Aimé Michel introduced a principle he called orthoteny, which held that clusters of UFO activity over a short period of time usually occur along straight lines that often intersect.
Aimé Michel observed that UFOs appear to use specific lines connected with the magnetic forces of the Earth.
The Bermuda Triangle is notorious for mysterious phenomena and strange disappearances, with roughly 50 ships and 20 airplanes vanishing without a trace.
Ivan T. Sanderson identified certain spots, like the Bermuda Triangle, as part of a strange kind of UFO hotspot he described as the world's 12 vile vortices.
Sanderson mapped the 12 vile vortices at equidistant points above and below the equator, forming a mysterious geometrical pattern on the Earth's surface.
The hotspot sites identified by Sanderson share strong magnetic anomalies caused by variations in the Earth's magnetic field.
The Earth could serve to power whatever exotic device extraterrestrials use to get here and leave.