Healthy cattle are suddenly found with their internal organs or body parts removed by sharp cuts and their entire bodies drained of blood.
Such mysterious livestock slaughters are called cattle mutilations. The name comes from the fact that cattle are the most commonly affected livestock.
This phenomenon has been occurring frequently since the early 1960s, mainly in the United States, but there have also been several reports in Japan.
The fact that the cuts looked as if they had been made with a sharp tool and that there was almost no blood left, along with the sighting of several luminous objects in the area the night the phenomenon occurred, led to rumors that it might have been an alien experiment.
Other speculations have also been made, including that they may have been victims of a ritual performed by a new religious group, or that it was caused by plasma generated in the atmosphere.
In 1979, former FBI agent Kenneth M. Rommel began an investigation and issued a report attributing the phenomenon to predation by wild animals. His experiments showed that animal carcasses are eaten from the soft parts, so the cuts are smooth as if cut by a sharp knife, and the blood pools in the lower part of the body due to its weight, so there is little or no bleeding.
He also concluded that when they do bleed, most of the blood is sucked up by the ground, and the soft parts such as eyes, ears, and organs are eaten by birds.
However, it has been pointed out that there are some inconsistencies in this report, and the fact that cattle mutilations have been occurring since 1960 has led to the development of a certain prominent hypothesis.
This theory states that cattle mutilation is part of a secret experiment conducted by the U.S. military.
Many believe that the U.S. military secretly killed the livestock as samples to check the level of radioactive contamination or as an experiment to test the use of plasma as a military weapon.
In fact, there have been several sightings of a suspicious black helicopter near these sites, and the fact that most of the damage was limited to cattle probably contributes to this speculation.
However, there is not yet enough evidence to say for sure that this is the case.
Investigations into cattle mutilations are likely to continue into the future.
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