March 2005 - Cape and Islands Paranormal Research Society
Transcription
March 2005 - Cape and Islands Paranormal Research Society
CAIPRS QUARTERLY March 2005, Volume I Cape And Islands Paranormal Research Society Is a society of paranormal researchers and investigators who conduct investigations of alleged paranormal activity throughout Cape Cod and New England EVP’s are voices from the dead or are they? Electronic Voice Phenomena, or EVP’s, are said to be the voices of people who have passed away that can be recorded and heard through the process of audio recording. Dave Sircom joined CAIPRS in October 2004 with a background in studying and recording EVP’s. Dave has been a member of The American Association of Electronic Voice Phenomena (AAEVP) for many years. Mr. Sircom recently conducted a presentation at Cape Cod Community College in W. Barnstable, Massachusetts where he presented the history, evidence, and future of EVP’s. CAIPRS has now branched out into the field of EVP’s with the creation of a new division, the EVP/ ITC team. This will allow anyone with an interest in joining Dave and the CAIPRS team to join them on cases to try to record EVP’S with their own equipment. Dave will teach each individual how to record and listen for anomalies in their recordings. He will also show them how to edit these recordings by us- ing software that eliminates background noise and by other means to hear the recordings clearer. It is up to the individual’s own judgment on what they hear or what it could possibly be. See the back page for more information about becoming a part of this exciting new division of CAIPRS. CAIPRS Learn about Video Editing and Video Camera’s at PACTV Plymouth, MA CAIPRS team members Joanne McCann and Derek Bartlett signed up for a course on field production at Plymouth Area Community Television (PACTV). During the months of February and March, Joanne and Derek met at PACTV on Tuesday evenings for three hour training courses. The five class course consisted of VHS camera operation, basic linear editing, graphic application, and final production. This knowledge will allow CAIPRS to air their open meetings on PACTV, as well as use the studio for possible upcoming broadcasts. PACTV has also allowed CAIPRS to present a Public Service Announcement on their airwaves. Tech Corner The tech corner is the place to learn about some of the equipment we use in the field. New Investigational Equipment Added to CAIPRS Arsenal. The Kestrel 4000 allows CAIPRS to takes weather monitoring on investigations to a whole new level. This piece of technology will allow them to monitor barometric pressure, altitude, density altitude, temperature, humidity, wind speed, wind chill, dew point, wet bulb, and heat index. This will allow CAIPRS to be on top of the environmental conditions, inside and out and allows them to monitor atmospheric conditions to see if there is any change during an investigation. If you would like to learn more about Kestrel monitoring devices go to www.kestrelmeters.com What is a Trifield Meter? A Small Fact why CAIPRS Takes Notes During an Investigation. CAIPRS team takes notes during an investigation, here are some of the guidelines they use while following procedure. We write and log in everything that happens. If you don't then you really don't have much research information. An example of this is one investigator gets a EMF reading that's high and never writes it down. Another investigator takes a picture of the same area but is not aware of the reading and gets a anomalous image. Without that EMF reading the picture may be good evidence, but with a report noting the reading, the picture greatly increases in evidence value. Some investigational teams use a pocket tape recorder instead which is fine, just make sure you have spare batteries and tapes. The original TriField ® Meter combines all the features needed for fast, accurate measurements of electromagnetic fields. It independently measures electric field and magnetic field, and is properly scaled to indicate the full magnitude of currents produced by each type of field inside a conductive body. Depending on where the knob is set, the meter detects either frequency- weighted magnetic fields (two separate scales), or frequency-weighted electric fields in the ELF and VLF range. It has significant sensitivity at 100,000 Hz, well past the 17,000 Hz horizontal scan of video displays. The radio/microwave setting can detect up to three billion Hz (3 GHz), which lets you gauge radio-wave power, CB and cellular phone equipment, and many types of radars. CAIPRS uses this device while in the field to detect fluctuations within the natural readings. Educational Center This section will allow you, the reader, to get a better understanding of our work and terminology. How Does a Video Recorder Work? A video recorder is much like a normal tape recorder, except that it records far more information each second. When you play an audio-tape in a normal tape recorder, small magnetized regions of tape move past a playback head. This playback head consists of an iron ring with a narrow gap in it and there is a coil of wire wrapped around the ring. As the magnetized regions of the tape pass near the ring's gap, they magnetize the ring. The ring's magnetization changes as the tape moves and these changing magnetizations cause currents to flow in the coil of wire. These currents are amplified and used to reproduce sound. When you record the tape, the recorder sends currents through the wire coil, magnetizing the iron ring and causing it to magnetize the region of tape that's near the gap in the ring. In a video recorder, the tape moves too slowly to produce the millions of the magnetization changes needed each second to represent a video signal. So instead of moving the tape past the playback head, the video recorder moves the playback head past the tape. As the tape travels slowly through the recorder, the playback head spins past it on a smooth cylindrical support. The tape is wrapped part way around this support and two or more playback heads take turns detecting the patches of magnetization on the tape's surface. The tape is tilted slightly with respect to the spinning heads so that the heads sweep both along the tape and across its width. That way, the entire surface of the tape is used to record the immense amount of information needed to reproduce images on a television screen. During recording, currents are sent through the heads so that they magnetize the tape rather than reading its magnetization. INVESTIGATIONAL TALK Electro-Magnetic Field Detector (EMF Detector or Trifield Meter): This tool detects the changes in the Electro-Magnetic Field. This field is around everything, from televisions to power boxes. So care must be used in detecting your "possible" ghost. The normal reading for paranormal activity is between 2.0 and 8.0. Above this is usually manmade in origin. A doppelganger: dop·pel·gäng·er or dop·pel·gang·er is a ghostly double of a living person, especially one that haunts its fleshly counterpart. ghost (gōst) n. -The spirit of a dead person, especially one believed to appear in bodily likeness to living persons or to haunt former habitats. -The center of spiritual life; the soul. -A demon or spirit. - A returning or haunting memory or image. Letter from the Founder Over the past few months, I have had the advantage of talking with people that had an interest in the paranormal. I recently spoke with a high school student who has to perform community service to graduate. He has asked if he could volunteer his eighty recommended hours with CAIPRS. I read this e-mail and started to think, when I was a teenager and interested in the paranormal, was there anyone that I could have turned to? The answer was no. Now as someone who is in the position to Meet Field Investigator Dave Sircom educate the community and its residents, my team and I are more than willing to assist anyone with a project or assignment they may have. When there is a project to be completed and the participant needs an “expert” in the field of Paranormal, I have to remind them there are no “experts” in this field, just professionals. So in conclusion, the paranormal investigational field has professionals as well as thrill seekers and glory hounds. It says something about CAIPRS when we receive a telephone call or an e-mail from the public. We have taken the days of table tipping and tomfoolery when it comes to the paranormal and have made it as professional as it has ever been. Sincerely, Derek W. Bartlett Founder and President Cape And Islands Paranormal Research Society with a spirit or entity via digital and analog voice recorders. Dave has resided with his wife in Yarmouth Port since 1974. Meet Lead Investigator Keith Kaestner Dave joined CAIPRS in November 2004. Over the last 5 years, Dave has focused his attention in working with EVP’s. He has done investigations and research, has been published by the American Association Of Electronic Voice Phenomenon, and has been featured in the book "There Is No Death And There Are No Dead". EVP, or Electronic Voice Phenomenon, is the process of capturing and/or communicating directly Keith joined CAIPRS in August 2002. He has always had a strong interest in the Paranormal. Documentaries and other media about the unexplained have always piqued his curiosity in things unknown. Since moving to the Cape in November of 2000, he has heard many tales which have furthered his interest in finding out the reality behind the legends. Keith earned a business degree in 1996 and works in the area of Finance. He brings to CAIPRS a strong sense of logic and analogy, something which aids all investigators in their quest for scientific proof rather than fairy tales. He is married with two children and in his spare time pursues adventures in Bowling. He is often quoted as saying " I am not looking to get scared, it seems to find me". Investigators Needed CAIPRS investigators needed, please look at membership requirements at www.caiprs.com and e-mail resume to: thesociety@caiprs.com SCIENTIST OF THE QUARTER WERNER HEISENBERG (1901 - 1976) was one of the greatest physicists of the twentieth century. He is best known as a founder of quantum mechanics, the new physics of the atomic world, and especially for the uncertainty principle in quantum theory. He is also known for his controversial role as a leader of Germany's nuclear fission research during World War II. After the war, he was active in elementary particle physics and West German science policy. The simultaneous measurement of two conjugate variables (such as the momentum and position or the energy and time for a moving particle) entails a limitation on the precision (standard deviation) of each measurement. Namely: the more precise the measurement of position, the more imprecise the measurement of momentum, and vice versa. In the most extreme case, absolute precision of one variable would entail absolute imprecision regarding the other. INFORMATION ON PAGE ABOVE OBTAINED AT http://www.aip.org/history/heisenberg/p01.htm CAIPRS and THE UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE When it comes to ghost hunting, Derek Bartlett, Founder of CAIPRS, has a theory why the uncertainty Principle might come into effect. “If we are to insert ourselves into the environment where the alleged haunting is happening, then we are changing the environment as we observe and investigate it. The haunting can not be investigated at its most informational value due to the fact the CAIPRS investigators are in the environment observing the activity, but change it due to the fact of observation” Derek Bartlett, President of Cape And Islands Paranormal Research Society CAIPRS’ New Division EVP/ITC is Looking for Members CAIPRS has opened the EVP/ITC investigational Division of Paranormal Research. You the reader can Join CAIPRS as an associated member, a founding member, or a benefactor. Each member will join CAIPRS investigators in the pursuit of evidence of voices from beyond. With each membership, you will receive a copy of Troy Taylor’s Ghost Hunters Guidebook. In addition, each member will join Dave Sircom and CAIPRS Investigators to places where EVP’s have been recorded in the past. The ITC division will work with video and white noise to record images that may be evidence of paranormal activity. If you have any questions about the EVP/ITC division, feel free to write thesociety@caiprs.com or call 508360-3281. There are a limited number of openings to join. Membership forms are attached for you convenience. Suggested Reading THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF GHOSTS AND SPIRITS BY ROSEMARY ELLEN GUILEY This large format book is an indispensable guide to ghosts and haunted places and contains a massive amount of information that cannot be found anywhere else. The author, who has written dozens of other books and is an respected expert in the field, has certainly done her homework here and has gathered information from all over the world. It is presented in an easy format that makes it great for both casual reading and serious research. A must have guide to the supernatural! CAIPRS heads to the most haunted small town in America: Alton, Illinois CAIPRS members will be traveling to Alton, Illinois to attend The Ninth Annual Conference of the American Ghost Society that will be held over the weekend of June 23-26. Alton, Illinois is one of the most haunted small towns in America! This wonderful annual event will feature nationally known authors and speakers on ghosts and the supernatural. To learn more, go to www.prairieghosts.com Next Month’s Meeting Earth Mysteries and Sacred Sights - April 29th 2005 Earth Mysteries, a term coined in the early 1970s, is today used to describe a multi-disciplined or 'holistic' approach to the study of ancient sites and landscapes. Founder Derek Bartlett will present a lecture on Earth Mysteries and Sacred Sights and the power they posses on April 29th 2005 at Cape Cod Community College North Building Room N117 from 7-9PM. Contact CAIPRS CAIPRS is looking for stories, photos, and ideas for the upcoming issues of the newsletter. If you are experiencing a possible haunting. Please e-mail all information to thesociety@caiprs.com or mail to CAIPRS P.O. Box 294 W. Barnstable, MA 02668
Similar documents
June 2005 - Cape and Islands Paranormal Research Society
community. The team soon learned that they were not just one of the vast number of onlookers, but were actually one of the more highly respected teams when it comes to ghost hunting. The team reali...
More information