17 de diciembre de 2024

Extraterrestres

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‘UK Roswell’ UFO debris analysis blows alien mystery open as ‘tech didn’t exist’

‘UK Roswell’ UFO debris analysis blows alien mystery open as ‘tech didn’t exist’

Fresh analysis of debris found at the site where an unfamiliar flying craft crashed into trees decades ago blows open the question of whether or not aliens really do exist. In January 1983, an object flying through the air hit trees near the small Welsh village of Llanilar, near Aberystwyth in the middle of the

Fresh analysis of debris found at the site where an unfamiliar flying craft crashed into trees decades ago blows open the question of whether or not aliens really do exist.

In January 1983, an object flying through the air hit trees near the small Welsh village of Llanilar, near Aberystwyth in the middle of the night.

Before it flew off seemingly undamaged, it scattered metal detritus across four fields.

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Now 40 years on, new analysis of this metal ignites the debate of extraterrestrial lifeforms with startling revelations.



St Hilarys Church, Llanilar

A flying object crashed into trees in the Welsh village of Llanilar in 1983, scattering metal debris across fields

In an update on his recent book from Flying Disk Press, Europe’s Roswell: 40 Years Since Impact, Mark Olly, a UFO expert and author, reveals evidence that suggests the object that hit the trees was from another planet, or at least not Earthly.

Olly wrote that The Wales Federation of Independent Ufologists «recovered about half a dozen pieces of metal and foil from the wooded area adjacent to the fields».



Europe's Roswell author Mark Olly

Author Mark Olly details the news findings in an update on his recent book

Three debris samples collected from the site, and looked after by fellow UFO expert Gary Rowe since, were sent to labs in Australia and America for new testing.

While Olly wrote that it had previously been believed that all the metal found was the same, the new analysis proved otherwise.

He noted: «Australia came in first as ‘Aluminums Foam’, partially agreeing with British Aerospace who back-in-the-day thought it was Aluminum in the form of Duralumin. America then returned their analysis as almost pure Lanthanum, an exotic and extremely expensive to produce metal on the new part of the periodic table.»



A piece of the recovered metal

Fresh analysis on debris found at the crash site reveals the type of metal found didn’t exist in 1983

Not only were the metals different, both Aluminum Foam and Lanthanum were not in circulation in 1983.

Olly wrote: «So we had two different metals in unique and specific forms that were not known to have been developed by the late 1970’s or available for actual use back in 1983. So was it one of ours, was it one of ‘theirs’, or was it some kind of back-engineered or hybrid technology?»

Further tests on the grey «resin» adhesives, the «none-aerodynamic green paint» found on the Aluminum, the «strange green rubber honeycomb coating» over the Lanthanum were inconclusive, whole the «honeycombed metal foil» was not analysed.

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