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Test Your Environment

Independent verification matters. If geoengineering is happening, it leaves traces in rainwater, snow, and soil. You can test for this yourself.

What to test for

Aluminum

Found in soil naturally but elevated levels in rainwater are abnormal. Normal rainwater: near 0 ppb.

Barium

Should not be present in significant quantities in rainwater.

Strontium

Another marker. Should be near-zero in clean rainwater.

Silver Iodide

The primary cloud seeding agent. If found in rainwater, cloud seeding is occurring.

Note: Having elevated levels doesn't prove geoengineering on its own, but combined with flight tracking data and visual observations, it builds a stronger evidence case.

How to collect samples

Rainwater

Use a clean glass or stainless steel container (never plastic). Place outdoors away from trees and buildings. Collect immediately after rain begins. Label with date, time, location, and weather conditions.

Snow

Collect fresh snow in a clean glass container. Note the same metadata: date, time, location, and weather conditions.

Soil

Use a clean stainless steel trowel. Collect from 2–4 inches depth. Place in a labeled glass jar.

Chain of Custody

For legal admissibility — photograph the collection, note GPS coordinates, keep a log, don’t break the seal until at the lab.

Where to send samples

  • University extension services— $15–40 for basic metals testing
  • Private labs— Basic Metals Panel: ~$50–150

Request analysis for: aluminum, barium, strontium, silver

Existing results

Geoengineering Watch Lab Results

Independent lab testing has shown elevated aluminum, barium, and strontium in rainwater and soil samples from across the country.

View lab results →

ICAN FOIA Findings

Government's own sampling programs. FOIA-obtained documents revealing what agencies already know about atmospheric contamination.

View ICAN findings →

Share your results

Document your results and share them. Submit a citizen observation through SkyLedger with your testing data attached. Every data point strengthens the case for transparency.

Important context

Environmental testing is one piece of evidence. Elevated metals alone don't prove anything — but combined with flight data, visual observations, and official records, they contribute to a broader picture. We encourage scientific rigor: test controls, document methodology, use accredited labs.