NRGscapes LAB is led by Dr Andrew D. Morgan and supported by a growing network of contributors, collaborators and research-aligned relationships.

Founder and research lead
NRGscapes LAB was founded by Dr Andrew D. Morgan as an applied research initiative focused on anomalous aerospace and environmental phenomena, structured field observation, UAP/NHI-related analysis, and the translation of unusual observational signatures into technical and research pathways.
The work draws on Andrew’s background in education, field-based investigation, technical writing, visual explanation, research synthesis and long-term development of the NRGscapes LAB research program.
A collaborative research model
NRGscapes LAB is not positioned as a closed institution. It is developing as a collaborative research platform where different forms of contribution can support different stages of the pathway.
Some contributors may assist with field observation. Others may support technical review, image analysis, engineering interpretation, publication, education, public communication or strategic engagement.
Contributor areas
Field observers
Support site monitoring, visual records, environmental notes and local context.
Technical contributors
Assist with imaging, sensing, data workflows, physics interpretation, instrumentation or engineering concepts.
Research collaborators
Support literature review, methods development, comparative analysis, publication and peer review.
Education contributors
Help translate complex research into curriculum-linked resources, learning material and public understanding.
Strategic partners
Support sponsorship, industry engagement, stakeholder briefings, infrastructure planning and capability development.
Why collaboration matters
The subjects investigated by NRGscapes LAB sit across multiple domains. They involve field evidence, imaging, aerospace behaviour, environmental context, human experience, physics interpretation, engineering questions and public communication.
No single discipline can resolve these questions alone. Collaboration allows the work to become more rigorous, more useful and more connected to real-world capability.
Invitation to collaborate
NRGscapes LAB welcomes contact from researchers, educators, engineers, field observers, sponsors, media professionals and organisations interested in structured engagement with UAP/NHI-related research and future capability development.