| Subject: Re: Can some expert explain why there is a UFO Cover-Up Anyway//Certainly!! |
| From: "Amanda Angelika" <maninc_mandy@hotmail.com> |
| Date: 12/05/2005, 16:54 |
| Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo,alt.alien.visitors,alt.alien.research,sci.skeptic |
In news:d5vd5b$9d5$1@lust.ihug.co.nz,
Your Name Here=Harvey <kiwi@ing.notin.aus> typed:
I may not have had a professional photography background - but I am
acquainted with basic still photography fundamentals, being a keen
amateur photographer from age 14, buying a Nikkormat FTn camera 2
years later. I would read anything to do with taking photographs, and
I was
always keen to read about special effects photography at that time.
I have worked at a colour film processing laboratory.
Anyway, I state clearly, that the Olympus 35ECR which is a basic point
and shoot compact 35mm camera was dropped accidentally, making the
focus ring stuck at infinity.
Never the less there is a substantial amount of "depth of field" in many of
these photographs which suggests a small aperture, because there is clear
focus within 3 to 6ft
While the idea of using a long fishing pole with a model on it, may
sound feasible, when you check out the locations the photographs were
taken at, with sheer drops present - and have a one-armed photographer
(I don't believe that Meier used a tripod for any of his 35mm camera
photographs), then what you propose, doesn't sound possible.
It would be possible with the help of someone else --- but still, you
would not produce anything similar to the result. The close object
(the
UFO model) would still be out of focus, before such close objects are
present, and are out of focus.
I don't agree there, there is substantial evidence of tripod use and air
operated cable releases can be anything up to around 15 ft long and can be
operated using a foot. The Olympus 35 ECR also came with a delayed action
system, there is no reason why having a disability i.e one arm would have
been an insurmountable problem in regard to trick photography.
The professional way of using 'forced perspective' photography is to
use a special lens (so special you simply can't buy it readily) which
can focus at two distances at once. You know about eyeglasses which
are bi-focal, don't you?
Without a special lens --- you are limited to using a very large f
stop number (ie. smallest aperature) and setting the focus, such that
objects 20 feet (say) to infinity would be in focus.
Split focus lenses such as that were widely available to amateur
photographers in the 1970s, they were basically filters that were screwed
over the lens using the filter mount. But I don't think he used one of
those. The depth of field in his photographs look more consistent with the
use of a small aperture and under darker conditions the use of a tripod.
Remember the
time (ie. date) this was taken in? No high speed colour films were
available, so the
shutter speed would have to be on the slow side - so a travelling UFO
photo, the UFO would not be 'sharp', as only a stationary UFO would
be sharp, with a slow shutter speed.\
Anyway, the lecture given by Wendelle Stevens is rather convincing,
with accompanying slides. I have a video of this on a CDr, if you are
interested in viewing it? I can send you a copy of it?
This is another reason why I suspect trickery. The photos appear to be taken
on 1970s Kodak Ectachrome slide film stock which came at about 100ASA.
Although 100 ASA is quite suitable for work in bright sunlight, you would
require longer shutter speeds in lower light, the depth of field evident in
all Meier's photos suggest the use of a small aperture, so obviously a
tripod and longer shutter speed would have been necessary. Provided there
wasn't a wind a model on a Nylon cord would stay sufficiently stationary to
provide a sharp image, a real UFO if it were buffeting about a bit or
rotating would not show a sharp image. Of course there is the other
possibility the models are attached to a pane of glass using BlueTack which
first came out in the late 60s early 1970s and was very useful for sticking
things to one's window to make things appear to fly :)
Again, I say it is the information given in the UFO Contact Notes,
that
is rather interesting. Few UFO contactees have provided as much
information, nor of consistant quality as the Plejaren information.
I think you can download a transcript of the Dietmar Rothe lecture,
which is about spiritual aspects given by the Plejarens. I do have a
video of the lecture, but it is missing the audio codec.
Well as far as I can see Meier hasn't come up with any prediction that
anyone with a brain couldn't have come up with. Average IQ comes out at
about 100, but anyone with an IQ above about 120 can come up with and do
things that may seem miraculous to the average person in the street. I have
no doubt Meier is an intelligent guy, but I don't see anything supernatural
or alien about him, He seems quite average for a borderline genius. Problem
is we make assumptions about people in regard to their background, but
unusual intelligence often has nothing to do with social status or the
background a person is born into.
I don't believe that Meier would have purchased an expensive tripod,
it
is probable that the tripod in that photograph, is not his.
You wouldn't find a tripod present in most of his other photographs.
I have seen other photos of Meier using a tripod.
--
Amanda