General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Documentary aims to 'break silence' on crash of TWA Flight 800 [View all]Baclava
(12,047 posts)New TWA 800 Radar Tapes Inexplicably Appear Revealing 'Blip Activity'
The National Transportation Safety Board has released radar data from the night TWA Flight 800 crashed that reveal radar-blip activity omitted from earlier reports.
New radar data relating to the July 17, 1996, explosion of TWA Flight 800 that went down off the coast of Long Island, N.Y., inexplicably have just become available. The well-publicized previous data focused narrowly on a 20-nautical-mile circle centered on the crash site and was the basis of the FBI's conclusion that there was little air or naval traffic in the selected area at the time of the crash. But that restricted data pattern, it turns out, is only a subset of a larger radar field.
The new data just obtained from sources at the National Transportation Safety Board, or NTSB, show that between the perimeters of a 22-nautical-mile circle and a 35-nautical-mile circle, a concentration of a large number of radar blips appears to be moving into a well-known military warning area closed to civilian and commercial traffic.
The anomaly presented by the additional data is as yet unexplained...the Department of the Navy specified that the closest naval vessel was the USS Normandy, 185 nautical miles to the south.
http://www.ufodigest.com/flight800.html
Edit history
Recommendations
0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):