The Behavior

Fortean Winds Research Cluster

The Behavior

What the phenomenon does. How it acts. Why it doesn’t fit any existing framework.

UAPs don’t just appear. They perform, evade, respond to observation, and vanish on their own terms. They cluster around nuclear installations. They interact with specific individuals while ignoring others standing feet away. They break equipment, then reappear when cameras are down. They exhibit what researchers across decades — from Charles Fort to John Keel to Jaques Vallee to the Defense Intelligence Agency — have called intentionality.

This is not the same as saying they are intelligent. It is saying that their behavior follows patterns — consistent, cross-cultural, cross-century patterns — that demand a better explanation than weather balloons, mass hysteria, or misidentified aircraft.

This cluster maps those patterns. Start anywhere. They all point at the same thing.


Start Here

The Trickster Phenomenon: Why UAPs Deceive, Evade and Play Games

The single best entry point into understanding UAP behavior. The phenomenon doesn’t just resist observation — it appears to manipulate it. Keel, Vallee, Jung, and the evidence from Skinwalker Ranch all point at the same behavioral profile.

The Shape of the Phenomenon: What UAP Patterns Reveal About Intent

The macro view. What the complete data record shows about where the phenomenon appears, who it targets, how it interacts, and what it consistently refuses to do.


The Evidence Record

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