A mysterious phenomenon appeared on December 9, 2009, in the morning hours over northern Norway. It was a spectacular sight, with a blue beam of light and a greyish spiral emanating from one end of it. The spiral was visible from and photographed from northern Norway and Sweden.
Major news stations “confirmed” the spiral to be caused by the exhaust coming from an out-of-control Bulava missile. Russian military and Norwegian astronomers also claimed the Norway spiral was caused by a failed Russian Bulava missile test. The Russian military confirmed that the missile was a Bulava ballistic missile, which has a range of 5,000 miles, and that it was test-fired from a submarine in the White Sea. The missile’s failure was likely due to a malfunction, causing it to spin wildly out of control and create the spiral pattern in the sky.
However, this does not explain the perfect, stationary spiral lasting more than five seconds or the blue beam, which appears to be the source of the spiral. Located at Ramfjord, about 20 Kilometers South of Tromsø in Norway where the “Norway Spiral” or the Blue Spiral was seen, is EISCAT facility, short for the European Incoherent Scatter. You could say that EISCAT is the HAARP of Scandinavia. It possible that the spiral originated from EISCAT.
The following is from the EISCAT website:
The Heater is used for ionospheric modification experiments applying high-power transmissions of high-frequency electro-magnetic waves to study plasma parameters in the ionosphere.
The name Heating stems from the fact that these high power electromagnetic waves, which are transmitted into the ionosphere with high-gain antennas, heat the electrons and thus modify the plasma state. To create plasma turbulence, the transmitted frequencies have to be close to the plasma resonances, which are 4 to 8 MHz.
The big question is obviously if this facility’s ability to heat the ionosphere and create plasma turbulence was responsible for creating the “Norway Spiral”?