Topics
Four topics
Four topics the site grew up around: the craft itself, the technology, the bismuth thread that runs through decades of UAP material research, and the question of who or what is behind it. These pages stay live as a way in.
The Craft
Nine recovered vehicles at S4. One named the Sport Model. Plus the Pentagon's catalog: the Tic Tac, the Gimbal, and a 500-knot mass underwater the size of a city block. None of them have wings, rudders, or visible propulsion. All of them violate what we think we know about aerodynamics.
The Technology
A basketball-sized reactor powered by what Lazar called Element 115, referenced by atomic number in 1989, fourteen years before the element was first synthesised. The unusual part of his claim isn't the element's existence, which was already mathematically predicted, but his assertion that a stable isotope of it exists. Three wave-guide emitters that bend gravity, or something that isn't gravity. Five observables codified at the Pentagon: 2,000 g acceleration, hypersonic velocity with no signature, trans-medium travel, low observability, sustained flight with no propellant.
The Bismuth Thread
Element 115 sits in the same column of the periodic table as bismuth. Bismuth keeps appearing across fifty years of independent UAP material research. Lazar in 1989. Townsend Brown in the 1950s. Hal Puthoff's layered Mg-Bi samples. Gary Nolan's lab at Stanford. Either it's a chemistry coincidence, or it isn't.
The Occupants
Bob Lazar saw briefing documents describing biological entities from Zeta Reticuli. Bodies with a single internal organ. The same star system Marjorie Fish identified in 1969 from Betty Hill's 1964 hypnosis-derived star map, roughly two decades before Lazar's account, with no shared source. Luis Elizondo refuses to call them aliens. Hal Puthoff lists six categories. The honest answer is that nobody knows what they are.