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Here is a video we received a while ago, showing a helicopter attempting a normal landing on an Aircraft Carrier. It didn't make it. It's in Window Media Player format. View Helicopter Crash VideoJack Burnett (pb253@gte.net) writes: I was travelling home from Speed Week at Bonneville Salt Flats on the road between Welles and Winemucca. I was headed west toward Oregon when I saw this I took a picture nobody in the area knew what I was talking about when I asked if there was a name for this rock thought you guys would get a kick out of it.
JLAMARC@aol.com sends us:
Ken (hakan-sayar@us.army.mil) sends us: I submit to you once again THE most Amazing Weird Frozen, Mysterious Ice to date that just happened this evening only hours after sending my last strange ice formations. This has got to be the most intriguing shape to date. It defies the linked explaination posted on your website under my original photos. This is by no means a spike whatsoever. What this is is totally spellbounding to me.
Cat Fish Bob (bluesteel1987@charter.net) sends us: Hi, a friend of mine brought this to work and showed me. He found it and two others barried under his house when he was doing some work under there house. I have been trying to talk him into taking it to the University to find out what it is. He is afraid he will not get it back. I talked him into letting me take this photo and i told him i would send to Art Bell and maybe he would post on web site and some one might know what it is ... Thank you ... Bob
eddie g. (nickel.master@verizon.net) replies: I saw your picture on Art Bell's web site (ABOVE),and I don't know "where" you live, but in the state of Florida we would catch one of these on rare occassion, down there they're called� "devil fish" the last one I caught was about 16 years ago on the east coast of Florida in a town called [Merritt Island] just off docs bait house, "looks like a cross between a cat fish,and a squid (lower half) in my opinion" ; the east seminol indians of that area said it was bad luck to catch one as they were not your everyday fish but were thought to be of the devil to scare all the other fish away when the great spirit was angry with thier tribe!! Thus the name devil fish, they are very rare, and I've only seen 3 in my entire life, too see 3 at once is highly unccommon, at least in Merritt Island Florida anyway, if you think they look wierd dead you should see them alive on the end of your fishing line, it will definitly give you the creeps catching something like that!!! I just cut my line 16 years ago, and didn't touch the damn thing; the water I caught it in is what they call brackish water [or half salt water, half fresh water] water comes in from the ocean through the inlet where sail boats come in to the fresh water of the river itself in that area; and that area was popular with the indians because hurricanes would make the least damage in that area of Florida than any other part of Florida, if you look at a map of brevard county you can see why; first area hit was Cocoa Beach, then the "bannana river" then the 50 mile long merritt island, then the "indian river" before hitting the mainland of cocoa florida, so everytime the hurricanes would go over a river they'd slow down to pick up more water from the river slowing the hurricanes winds down twice before hitting the mainland!! Causing less descruction... until the 1950's it was common site to see flying fish too!!! My dad told me stories of not even being able to fish due to the decks of the boats getting covered with flying fish!!! And mosquitoes so bad if you went out at night your arms would turn black within 2 minutes due to so many mosquitoes covering them up!!! he said you could take your hand, and wipe off one arm to reval your arm covered red in blood!!! [Now they have mosquito trucks ther that spray every night to keep them down]!!! It is also said that the kings of the waters often fight over the brackish water (sharks attack alligators, and vise versa in that water) imagine watching that on the nature channel!!! Anyway I don't know the scientific name for the devil fish but that is what they call it in Florida.. Hope this information enlightens you a little. Rodney A. Duplisea (FansFla@cs.com) Bangor, Maine writes: I found this newspaper clipping in my mother's scrapbook. She had clipped it from the Bangor Daily News, in Bangor Maine during the Korean War. Possibly, you have seen this before. When I saw this clipping, it made me think so much of your show.
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