On December 30, 2025, I appeared on Coast to Coast AM with George Noory. During the interview, we talked about how Nemesis is growing in size and that in 2026 it will become larger than our sun.
At the end of the interview, we discussed the coming pole shift in 2030, and George asked me if I was excited about the possibility. I told him that there is nothing exciting about people dying and that what I feel is a sense of dread and anticipation.
A few days later, JP Jones sent me the Signs data for December 2026 and a simple note. “Should the pattern continue, Kevlar Umbrellas will be a hot item next year.”
The question of whether the pattern could continue was haunting. This is because the numbers for that month were significantly higher than expected, and we had a conference call to discuss it. Instead of publishing, we decided to take a mid-month snapshot to determine whether the data is trending consistently. It is as you will see in this Signs installment.
Our analysis shows that Nemesis will indeed be the largest object in our sky sometime during the second half of 2026, at which point, global awareness of Nemesis will occur. However, the problem with awareness is that it is meaningless unless people take action, which is why the government and media will continue to be dismissive and dishonest.
Due to the volume of data in this Signs installment, it will be a longer report than most, because Earth is now in the danger zone for years to come, and there is an extremely high likelihood of a catastrophic impact event before the end of the year. With that in mind, let’s dive into the numbers.
December 2025 Fireballs
Fireballs are reported worldwide, and the American Meteor Society is the primary source for this dataset in North America.
AMS Multistate / Country Fireballs
Multistate/country fireballs cross the borders of multiple states and countries. This is a critical category in the dataset because these fireballs must travel long distances to receive reports from across large geographic areas. We refer to these types of fireballs as “skimmers” because they exhibit flat trajectories.
December 2025 set a new record for this dataset by a significant statistical margin. What is notable is that November 2025 was dramatically higher than November 2022. This goes beyond natural variability and is quite concerning.
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AMS Huge Event Fireballs
It’s commonplace for Multistate / Country Fireballs to be reported as huge events because a fireball is considered a huge event when 100 or more eyewitnesses report it. We call them “plungers” because they have a steep trajectory.
While preparing the numbers for December 2025, JP Jones noted that we had slightly underreported November 2025. That underreported amount is shown in the red-dashed box. The increase in this dataset last month was six times that of 2022.
AMS Monthly Total Fireballs
The monthly total fireballs are the most critical category in this dataset, and December 2025 showed a significant uptick, bringing it significantly ahead of the previous three years.
The monthly numbers for December 2025 show a steady high for all three datasets. When we see statistically significant increases like this, we know we’re seeing a solid trend.
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Yearly AMS Fireball Totals
At the end of 2024, we see something sobering that we did not expect. 2025 now matches the previous high set in 2022.
To get a more meaningful interpretation of this data, we also decided to represent it in a line graph.
By displaying the data this way, we could now see a bucket pattern that begins in 2022 and ends in 2025. Numerically, it captures the arc of the Nemesis trajectory as it approaches and passes perihelion, so we took it to the next step to track Nemesis with more detail and evaluate the velocity it picked up along the arc.
What surprised us was the amount of acceleration Nemesis experienced after it passed perihelion in October 2024. It was significantly more than we had anticipated. A lot more. This raised a small possibility that we could be seeing a fluke in the data, and we determined that if that is the case, we would hold back on reporting December 2025 until we could make a mid-month snapshot for this month.
Mid-Month Snapshot
The two datasets we needed to evaluate for this min-month snapshot are monthly total fireballs and huge event fireballs.
Here we see that the January snapshot is statistically higher by a significant amount relative to January 2025.
However, the big surprise is that the January snapshot is tracking with previous years, except for 2025 beccause that year had a null reporting value.
The finding for this mid-month snapshot is that December 2025 is not anomalous and represents a clear picture of what is happening in our sky. This brings us back to JP Jones’s comment. “Should the pattern continue, Kevlar Umbrellas will be a hot item next year.”
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Impact Threat Assessment for 2026
The AMS dataset we use to evaluate impact threat levels is based on large fireball events reported from 2009 to the present.
We are now at the highest levels for Huge Objects throughout our study. Previously, we used the AMS 100-event threshold, which worked well at lower levels. At this point, we’ve crossed a threshold, and the data reporting has begun showing a marginally higher level with a 97-event threshold. Therefore, we are showing both results: Reporting with 100 events, as shown above, and the 97-event threshold, shown below, for the same database specifications.
When we find differences in data analysis like this, we have historically adapted our methodologies to accommodate database searchers. Going forward, we will use the 97-event setting for this dataset threshold reporting specification to ensure more accurate results overall.
Here we see that Earth entered the outermost ring of the Nemesis Cloud in 2013, and after 2014, it passed into the gap between the outermost and middle rings.
In 2016, we were solidly in the middle ring of the Nemesis Cloud, and we passed into the gap between the middle and inner rings in 2018. We began entering the middle cloud of the Nemesis Cloud in 2019.
After 2022, Earth began moving from the inner edge of the middle ring, and by 2023, we were solidly in the gap between the inner edge of the middle ring and the outer edge of the inner ring. Since 2024, Earth has been in the inner ring of the Nemesis Cloud and will remain there for the foreseeable future.
The inner ring of the Nemesis Cloud is the most dangerous. We’ll see iron oxide events, and due to the higher percentage of large debris in the inner cloud, the threat of a catastrophic asteroid impact with a high loss of life will remain a constant for the foreseeable future as well.
Until there is a major loss of life event, the suppression and obfuscation of Nemesis observations will continue primarily because people most people are dismissive of what is being reported. Unfortunately, only after a deadly impact event will enough people take this topic seriously. Nonetheless, one will happen most likely in the second half of this year.
USGS vs. VOLCANO DISCOVERY 2025 YTD
Volcano Discovery is a recognized news portal for earthquake and volcano updates. Volcano Discovery is an adventure tour operator that conducts geotours and volcano tours worldwide, in collaboration with trusted partners. We report data from the USGS and Volcano Discovery, enabling you to view the suppression of data that our government has been conducting for several years.

According to Volcano Discovery data, December 2025 is above November 2025, but the difference is not statistically significant overall. Conversely, USGS, with its data capping strategy, went in the opposite direction. They’re so predictable.
In December 2025, there were 57,907 earthquakes with magnitudes up to 7.6. The fact that we saw three quakes above magnitude 7 is significant. As we have reported in previous installments of Signs, Earth’s inner core is locked with Nemesis, causing a minor imbalance in Earth’s core. This will persist, and as Nemesis continues its southward plunge through its aphelion leg, Earth events will continue to intensify for the foreseeable future.
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Tags: brown dwarf, earthquake, fireballs, natural disasters, Nemesis, Nibiru















