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Secret Sasquatch Research Facility Report

Secret Sasquatch Research Facility Report

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Secret Sasquatch Research Facility Report
The report describes a classified U.S. military research program, initiated in 1987 after a Sasquatch was killed by a train, that has expanded over 37 years to involve over 100 personnel in a heavily secured underground facility inside a mountain. Specimens and Facility
  • 107 cadavers (various ages and subspecies) stored in freezers.
  • 13 living specimens, acquired at significant human cost (multiple helicopter crashes attributed to capture attempts, officially covered as training accidents).
  • Access requires passing three checkpoints; an elevator descends over 100 feet to the research levels.
Key Biological Findings
  • Anatomy: Larger and denser than humans, with two extra ribs forming natural armor capable of stopping 30-caliber rounds; extremely dense skull (vulnerable only via eye socket or base); consumes entire prey (including bones) every 3–4 days.
  • Genetics: 48 chromosomes (like apes, two more than humans), indicating not a human subspecies.
  • Camouflage: Generate electric current through hair to reflect surroundings (electric camouflage); believed to also power night vision (glowing eyes when active).
  • Vocalization: Three sets of vocal cords produce infrasound. Males induce fear, anxiety, confusion, or temporary memory loss; females produce calming/confusing effects that pacify prey.
  • Communication: Use clicks, grunts, hand signals, and infrasound; live in hierarchical groups led by one alpha male.
Social and Reproductive Behavior
  • Strict hierarchy; adult males fight to the death if females are present but can coexist without females.
  • Females breed only after prior offspring reach 3–4 years; usually single births; young cling to mother for first year.
  • Different responses to staff: calm and accepting with female staff; cautious or aggressive with male, uniformed, or armed staff.
  • Female specimens have projected vivid mental images (“waking dreams”) to female staff (capture, childbirth, food preferences); no such events with male staff.
Tracking and Release
  • Four non-aggressive specimens released with GPS implants.
  • Tracked individuals follow long migration routes (e.g., eastern Texas to northern Ontario) or move 40–50 miles per night, staying weeks in one area.
  • Signals sometimes vanish for days, suggesting underground cave travel.
  • Distinct musks emitted for breeding, threat, or other contexts.
The program prioritizes military applications (survivability, camouflage, infrasound weapons) and maintains extreme secrecy to prevent technology theft or public disruption.

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