EOM.i'm not familiar with the acronym EOM to know subtleties of what itimplies. noting it comes before your signature line.
Dr.
Garry Nolan is a Professor of Pathology at Stanford University. His
research ranges from cancer to systems immunology. Dr. Nolan has also
spent the last ten years working with a number of individual analyzing
materials from alleged Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon.
His
robust resume—300 research articles, 40 US patents, founding of eight
biotech companies, and honored as one of Stanford’s top 25
inventors—makes him, easily, one of the most accomplished scientists
publicly studying UAPs.
Motherboard sat down with Garry to discuss his work. It has been edited for length and clarity.
[For more with Dr. Garry Nolan, watch this interview with Jesse Michels on American Alchemy.]
MOTHERBOARD: How long have you had an interest in UAPs?
Dr. Garry Nolan: I’ve
always been an avid reader of science fiction, so it was natural at
some point that when YouTube videos about UFOs began to make the rounds I
might watch a few. I noticed that this guy at the time, Steven Greer,
had claimed that a little skeleton might be an alien. I remember
thinking, 'Oh, I can prove or disprove that.' And so I reached out to
him. I eventually showed that it wasn't an alien, it was human. We
explain a fair amount about why it looked the way it did. It had a
number of mutations in skeletal genes that could potentially explain the
biology. The UFO community didn't like me saying that. But you know,
the truth is in the science. So, I had no problem just stating the
facts. We published a paper and it ended up going worldwide. It was on the front page of just about
every major newspaper. What's more appealing or clickbait than
‘Stanford professor sequences alien baby’?
The Atacama Skeleton. Photo: Bhattacharya S et al. 2018 / Genome Research
That
ended up bringing me to the attention of some people associated with
the CIA and some aeronautics corporations. At the time, they had been
investigating a number of cases of pilots who'd gotten close to supposed
UAPs and the fields generated by them, as was claimed by the people who
showed up at my office unannounced one day. There was enough drama
around the Atacama skeleton that I had basically decided to forswear all
continued involvement in this area. Then these guys showed up and said,
‘We need you to help us with this because we want to do blood analysis
and everybody says that you've got the best blood analysis
instrumentation on the planet.’ Then they started showing the MRIs of
some of these pilots and ground personnel and intelligence agents who
had been damaged. The MRIs were clear. You didn't even have to be an MD
to see that there was a problem. Some of their brains were horribly,
horribly damaged. And so that's what kind of got me involved.
Does the Department of Pathology at Stanford have a track record of pulling practical jokes on you?
I
thought it was a practical joke at the beginning. But no, nobody was
pulling a practical joke. And just as an aside, the school is completely
supportive, and always has been of the work that I've been doing. When
the Atacama thing hit the fan, they stepped in and helped me deal with
the public relations issues around it.
Are you able to mention which folks from which governmental departments other than aeronautics approached you?
No, I'm not.
Can you describe the more anomalous effects on the brains you observed with the MRIs?
If
you've ever looked at an MRI of somebody with multiple sclerosis,
there's something called white matter disease. It's scarring. It's a big
white blob, or multiple white blobs, scattered throughout the MRI. It's
essentially dead tissue where the immune system has attacked the brain.
That's probably the closest thing that you could come to if you wanted
to look at a snapshot from one of these individuals. You can pretty
quickly see that there's something wrong.
Left - Normal brain; Right - Injury and resulting white matter disease. Photo: Anonymous.
How many patients did you take a look at in that first phase?
It
was around 100 patients. They were almost all defense or governmental
personnel or people working in the aerospace industry; people doing
government-level work. Here's how it works: Let's say that a Department
of Defense personnel gets damaged or hurt. Odd cases go up the chain of
command, at least within the medical branch. If nobody knows what to do
with it, it goes over to what's called the weird desk, where things get
thrown in a bucket. Then somebody eventually says, ‘Oh, there's enough
interesting things in this bucket worth following up on that all look
reasonably similar.’ Science works by comparing things that are similar
and dissimilar to other things. Enough people were having very similar
kinds of bad things happen to them, that it came to the attention of a
guy by the name of Dr. Kit Green.
He was in charge of studying some of these individuals. You have a
smorgasbord of patients, some of whom had heard weird noises buzzing in
their head, got sick, etc. A reasonable subset of them had claimed to
have seen UAPs and some claimed to be close to things that got them
sick. Let me show you the MRIs of the brains of some of these people.
Hypermorphism in Head of Caudate<-->Putamen. Photo: Garry Nolan.
We
started to notice that there were similarities in what we thought was
the damage across multiple individuals. As we looked more closely,
though, we realized, well, that can't be damaged, because that's right
in the middle of the basal ganglia [a group of nuclei responsible for motor control and other core brain functions].
If those structures were severely damaged, these people would be dead.
That was when we realized that these people were not damaged, but had an
over-connection of neurons between the head of the caudate and the
putamen [The caudate nucleus plays a critical role in various higher
neurological functions; the putamen influences motor planning, learning,
and execution]. If you looked at 100 average people, you wouldn’t see
this kind of density. But these individuals had it. An open question is:
did coming in contact with whatever it was cause it or not?
For
a couple of these individuals we had MRIs from prior years. They had it
before they had these incidents. It was pretty obvious, then, that this
was something that people were born with. It's a goal sub-goal setting
planning device, it's called the brain within the brain. It's an
extraordinary thing. This area of the brain is involved (partly) in what
we call intuition. For instance, Japanese
chess players were measured as they made what would be construed as a
brilliant decision that is not obvious for anybody to have made that
kind of leap of intuition, this area of the brain lights up.
We had found people who had this in spades. These are all so called
high-functioning people. They're pilots who are making split second
decisions, intelligence officers in the field, etc.
Everybody
has this connectivity region in general, but let’s say for the average
person that the density level is 1x. Most of the people in the study had
5x to 10x and up to 15x, the normal density in this region. In this
case we are speculating that density implies some sort of neuronal
function.
Correlation between genetics caudate<-->putamen density.
Did
the people who claimed that they'd had an encounter, especially the
pilots, describe any perceivable decrease in neurological capacity?
Of
the 100 or so patients that we looked at, about a quarter of them died
from their injuries. The majority of these patients had symptomology
that's basically identical to what's now called Havana syndrome. We
think amongst this bucket list of cases, we had the first Havana
syndrome patients. Once this turned into a national security problem
with the Havana syndrome I was locked out of all of the access to the
files because it's now a serious potential international incident if
they ever figured out who's been doing it.
That still left individuals who had seen UAPs. They didn't have Havana syndrome. They had a smorgasbord of other symptoms.
How does the impact of electromagnetic frequencies factor into your hypotheses about what exactly transpired here?
With one of the patients, it happened on the Skinwalker Ranch.
Given how deep into their brain the damage went, we can actually
estimate the amount of energy required in the electromagnetic wave
someone aimed at them. We don't think that has anything to do with UAPs.
We think that that's some sort of a state actor and again related to
Havana syndrome somehow.
Brain damage from Skinwalker Ranch
Other than MRIs, what technologies were you using to analyze the patients?
We
did a deep psychological evaluation of all of these people, just to
make sure that they were stable and we were not dealing with obviously
delusional individuals. My role in the initial project was analysis on
blood, using a device called CyTOF which was something that I had been involved in the development of. The
problem was that we couldn't really conclude very much because many of
the cases happened years before I ended up getting the blood. With an
acute injury to be seen in some telltale signature, we need to collect
the within four or five days or a couple of weeks, but blood from an
individual a couple of years out will not be useful. What I told the
people in the government is I need access to their blood while the case
is still acute.
Is there anything man-made that might have this impact on the brain?
The
only thing I can imagine is you're standing next to an electric
transformer that's emitting so much energy that you're basically getting
burned inside your body.
Depth of ionizing radiation
Are you simply attempting to document what you see? Or are you looking for a cause as well?
Yes,
it's kind of the natural way that science is done. First, you catalog,
then you organize and then you say: well, this is similar to that and
this other thing is similar to that but why is this other thing
different? And then, if you have enough data, you start to look for
causes. I do that every day with our cancer work. We always try to come
up with hypotheses on why something is. Hypotheses are innumerable—they
are proof of nothing. So, I am careful NOT to come to a premature
conclusion because you only need one disproof to undermine a hypothesis.
That's what I'm trying to stay away from. I have my private thoughts
about what I think is going on, and some of them I'm very, very sure
about. I'm open to being wrong. Except most of the time, I know I'm
probably right.
You've also analyzed inanimate materials like alleged UAP fragments...
You've
probably heard of Jacques Vallée, Kit Green, Eric Davis and Colm
Kelleher. All roads lead to them when it comes to UAP. I basically
became friends with that whole group; they call it The Invisible
College. When they found out some of the instruments that I had
developed, using mass spectrometry, they asked if I could analyze UAP
material, and tell them something about it. That led to the development
of a roadmap of how to analyze these things.
The
Invisible College. From left: Douglass Price-Williams, David Saunders,
Leo Sprinkle, Dick Henry, Jacques Vallée, J. Allen Hynek, Claude Poher,
and Fred Beckman. Photo: Ted Phillips
Some
of the objects are nondescript, and just lumps of metal. Mostly,
there's nothing unusual about them except that everywhere you look in
the metal, the composition is different, which is odd. It's what we call
inhomogeneous. That’s a fancy way of saying 'incompletely mixed.' The
common thing about all the materials that I've looked at so far, and
there's about a dozen, is that almost none of them are uniform. They're
all these hodgepodge mixtures. Each individual case will be composed of a
similar set of elements, but they will be inhomogeneous.
Material samples from Ubatuba. Chart: Garry Nolan
One of the materials from the so called Ubatuba event [a UAP event in Brazil], has extraordinarily altered isotope ratios of
magnesium. It was interesting because another piece from the same event
was analyzed in the same instrument at the same time. This is an
extraordinarily sensitive instrument called a nanoSIMS - Secondary Ion
Mass Spec. It had perfectly correct isotope ratios for what you would
expect for magnesium found anywhere on Earth. Meanwhile, the other one
was just way off. Like 30 percent off the ratios. The problem is there's
no good reason humans have for altering the isotope ratios of a simple
metal like magnesium. There's no different properties of the different
isotopes, that anybody, at least in any of the literature that is public
of the hundreds of thousands of papers published, that says this is why
you would do that. Now you can do it. It's a little expensive to do,
but you'd have no reason for doing it.
I
mean, let’s think about what people use isotopes for today. Most of
the time humans use isotopes to blow stuff up—uranium or plutonium—or to
poison someone, or used as a tracer in order to kill cancer. But those
are very, very specific cases. We are almost always only using
radioactive isotopes. We don't ever change the isotope ratios of stable
isotopes except perhaps as a tracer. What that means is that if you find
a metal where the isotope ratios are changed far beyond what is
normally found in nature, then that material has likely been
engineered—the material is downstream of a process that caused them to
be altered. Someone did it. The questions are who… and why?
Material samples from Ubatuba. Chart: Garry Nolan
So,
now, let's look at what these materials are claimed to be. In almost
every case, these are the leftovers of some sort of process that these
objects spit out. So you go look at the cases where molten metal falls
from these objects. Why would 30 pounds of a molten metal fall from a flying object?
What
are the circumstances in some of these cases? For instance, in some
cases the witnesses state that the observed objects appeared unstable,
or in some kind of distress. Then, it spits out 'a bunch of stuff.' Now
the object appears it's stable and it moves off. It looks like it fixed
itself. One hypothesis would be that the material it offloads is part of
the mechanism the object uses for moving around, and when things get
out of whack, the object has to offload it. It just drops this stuff to
the ground, kind of like the exhaust. That begs the question (again
assuming the things are real at all): what are they using it for? If
there's altered isotope ratios, are they using the altered isotope
ratios? Are the altered ratios the result of the propulsion mechanism?
Again, pure speculation: When the ratios get that far out of whack, do
they have to offload because it's no longer useful in propulsion?
Smarter people than me will come up with better reasons—but this is the
fun of the science. The data is there… the explanation is not.
How many objects have you checked out that are not playing by our rules?
So
of the 10 or 12 that I've looked at, two seem to be not playing by our
rules. That doesn't mean that they're levitating, on my desk or
anything, it just means that they have altered isotope ratios.
Have you ever used a super quantum interference device?
We
will likely be using SQUIDs in a new device that can determine the
atomic structure of anything, at a sub-angstrom resolution. There's no
device in the world that can do that today, especially of an amorphous
object. We can do crystals, we can do little bits of biology with what's
called cryo-EM. But this device supersedes all of them. So I'm talking
with the government about building that.
Are
the devices and methods that you have available to you in terms of
being able to analyze this material sufficient? In a perfect world, what
would you want to see?
Depending on how deep you want to
go, each analysis costs anywhere from $10,000 to $20,000. That tells you
what the atoms are, what the isotope ratios are, crystalline quality—a
lot of things that are sort of standard materials analysis. The point of
doing this though is to figure out what it was used for. To do that,
eventually, you do need to get down to the atomic level.
Let's
say we didn't have transistors today and one of these objects dropped a
big chunk of germanium doped with other elements, or, you know, these
little transistors. We would not have a clue as to the function, and we
would ask 'why would anyone put arrays of germanium with these strange
impurities in them… what is this thing?'
Anybody
who's engineering materials these days for doing any kind of advanced
electronics and photonics understands that where the atoms are in the
structure matters. There's a thing that's often used in biology called
the structure-function relationship. Structure defines the function.
Sometimes, if you can just see the structure, you can understand the
function. I can look at a heart and watch a little bit of how it moves
and understand its function. I can look at the tubes in your veins and
say, that function is to carry blood. As we're looking at the structure
of cells, when we see the structure of a protein, we can get a sense of
how it's operating. So that's really what it's about. The next frontier
of materials study is atomic. If you want to understand something very
advanced, you better have something like this in your back pocket.