Rod (cryptozoology)
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Rods, sometimes known as Sky Fish or Solar Entities, [1] are a rather new entry in the field of cryptozoology. They are said to be creatures which flit about in the air at such a high speed as to not be seen by the naked eye. However, rods appear to be observational artifacts produced by rapidly flying animals. Practically all sightings of rods are based on video evidence, due to the propensity of video cameras to produce characteristic stroboscopic artifacts when imaging rapidly flying animals, especially insects, but also including birds. Their recent popularity seems to be a result of media exposure in television and in tabloids.
[edit] Sightings
Rods have been spotted in the U.S., Canada, the Philippines and China.[2] Rods have also been sighted underwater and in caves. José Escamilla has promoted video footage of rods recorded during the filming of BASE jumpers at the Cave of Swallows in Mexico.[1]
[edit] Description
Rods gain their name from their rodlike shape. However, they have also been called "flying rods", "skyfish" and "solar entities". They appear to be anywhere from 12 cm to 50 meters in length.[citation needed] Rods can control their flight path as birds and insects do.[citation needed] Rods are not classified as atmospheric beasts because rods are nearly always described as much smaller than atmospheric beasts and as invisible to the naked eye; in addition, rods have a much shorter history as a subject of research in cryptozoology and the paranormal.
[edit] Theories
[edit] Unknown Creature/Insect
A common theory held by cryptozoologists and believers is that rods are some kind of unknown being. When viewing rods on camera they appear to be able to behave and move on their own.[3] It is proposed that they have a thin membrane across their axis which is used for propulsion through the air, in a manner similar to the way a cuttlefish uses its fins. It has been suggested that Rods are possible relatives of anomalocarids which have taken to the air.[citation needed]
[edit] UFOs
Others have theorized rods may be UFOs traveling at high speed, explaining why they are usually only seen on camera, and the fact they are often associated with UFO phenomena. Others have said that they are some kind of UFO probes sent by aliens[4] and are commonly cylindrical shaped.[5]
[edit] Explanations
Evidence points to the conclusion that they are mere tricks of light which result from how images (primarily video images) are recorded and played back. In particular, the fast passage before the camera of an insect flapping its wings has been shown directly to produce rod-like effects, due to motion blur, if the camera is shooting with relatively long exposure times.[6] (In low-light conditions or even when pointed at blue sky, the automatic exposure programming of a video camera is likely to select the longest possible exposure time, which is 1/60th second per video field for NTSC format or 1/50th second for PAL format.) This criticism points to such video being physically unable to capture a clean image of something which moves so fast relative to the camera. In particular, the "membrane" in a video frame of a rod is effectively a time-lapse of the wings of the flying animal in different positions over several wingbeats that occurred during the field exposure time, while the central "rod" is a time-lapse image of the body, showing the full distance traveled during the field exposure time. The effect is especially pronounced with large, long-bodied insects which have broad wings and fairly slow wingbeats, such as mantises, grasshoppers, and katydids, or completely opaque wings such as moths. On video equipment which resolves the two interlaced fields of a single video frame (which are captured successively and then displayed as alternating horizontal lines), the "rod" effect can be seen to alternate from one field to the other, producing the distinctive gaps between successive images.[7] Similar results can be produced using standard film, if there is a long exposure and/or a stroboscopic lighting effect which lasts more than a single wingbeat. This is the technical evidence, demonstrating that one can produce "rod" effects at will if one uses the right equipment, lighting, and subject.
Rods were the subject of season 1, episode 111 of the History Channel series Monster Quest, first aired on January 9, 2008. Near the end of the episode, a "rod" is captured simultaneously by a traditional video camera and a high-speed camera. While the video recorded by the traditional camera showed a brightly-illuminated "rod" with multiple undulating wings, the high-speed video clearly showed a common moth flying across its field of view. A man interviewed in this episode claimed to have accidentally knocked a rod out of the air when he was a child. He and his brother were throwing sticks up in the air and he alleged that he hit a rod with a stick and it fell to the ground. He described it as having a round lamprey-like mouth, over a foot long, and nearly translucent. It seemed to be stunned, but when he threw it in the air it managed to fly away.
[edit] Capturing rods
On August 8-9 2005, China Central Television (CCTV) aired a two-part documentary about flying rods in China. It reported an incident which happened from May to June of the same year at Tonghua Zhenguo Pharmaceutical Company in Tonghua City, Jilin Province, which debunked the flying rods.[8] Surveillance cameras in the facility's compound captured video footage of flying rods identical to those shown in Jose Escamilla's video. Getting no satisfactory answer to the phenomenon, the curious research staff of the facility, being scientists, decided that they would try to solve the mystery by attempting to catch these airborne creatures. Huge nets were set up and the same surveillance cameras then captured images of rods flying into the trap. When the nets were inspected, the "rods" were no more than regular moths and other ordinary flying insects. Subsequent investigations proved that the appearance of flying rods on video was an optical illusion created by the slower recording speed of the camera (done to save video space). This is the empirical evidence showing that the "rods" themselves can be captured, and that they do indeed prove to be ordinary animals.
On April 25, 2008, photographer Bil Paul was using a 1.3 megapixel cameraphone to photograph a swarm of insects above a stream in San Mateo, California. In one of the first shots, several of the insects are clearly seen frozen in time, with a single pair of wings. In a later shot, with a slower shutter speed as indicated by a brighter background, the insects suddenly become "flying rods." The assumption is that with the slower shutter speed, the insects became blurred along their flight path, and exhibit multiple wing beats, making them look like flying centipedes.
[edit] Rods in popular culture
- Rods were a subject of intense debate in the 14th episode of filmmaker Kevin Smith's SModcast, released June 13, 2007. Smith discusses with his co-hosts Walt Flanagan and Malcolm Ingram the known details of the "Rod Phenomena", and Flanagan's claimed sightings near Henry Hudson High School in Highlands, New Jersey, and during a New Jersey Devils ice hockey broadcast.
- Numerous games or animated features include creatures that appear to be modeled on "rods" and their purported properties, including Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow, La-Mulana, Zettai Shounen, Eureka Seven, d20 Modern, Jojo's Bizarre Adventure, and Shadow Hearts: From the New World.
- A 'flying rod', very much fitting the general description of the phenomena, appears in the movie "The Brave One", suggesting it might be a filming artifact, with the camera capturing an insect rapidly flying by close to the lenses. It can be spotted if carefully advancing the movie frames manually somewhere near 1h:21m:20s into the movie (depending on release and version). It is, however, also barely noticeable during normal playback. The scene is where Erica and detective Mercer meet at a subway station exit and have a brief conversation during their fast walk through a park.
[edit] References
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Straight Dope report: What's up with "rods," the mysterious insects that can be seen only on video?
- Shannon L. Story's Rods: Facts or Fiction, You Decide
- Jose Escamilla's "Rods" Video Sequences
- The Cryptid Zoo: Air Rods in Cryptozoology
- Famous video of "rods" at the Cave of the Swallows
- Detailed video analysis