American geologist Frank Kimbler, a ufology enthusiast, has been searching with a metal detector since 2010 around the town of Roswell in New Mexico, renowned for the fact that in 1947 a strange object fell from the sky there.
Officially, the US authorities said it was a secret military weather balloon monitoring nuclear weapons tests. However, most ufologists and ordinary people believe that an alien ship with a crew crashed there.
That the wreck of the ship was taken up by the military and then carefully examined, and among the crew there were one or two survivors who were then interrogated and much valuable information was obtained from them.
This theory is confirmed by the words of several dozen people, some of whom, they say, were involved in transporting debris, examining the bodies of the deceased crew, and even talked to the surviving alien.
But unfortunately, words are just words, and physical evidence of the truth of the Roswell UFO crash has not yet been presented to the public. However, Frank Kimbler's discovery may finally be gaining momentum. During 14 years of searching, Frank found over 20 unusual pieces of metal here.
Very diminutive, no larger than a fingernail, but chemical analysis of the most unusual one showed that it was 100% pure aluminum. Such pure aluminum does not occur in nature, and high-purity aluminum is mainly used in the space industry, and with the development of computer technology, it is used in difficult drives. If a weather balloon, i.e. a balloon with sensors, actually crashed in Roswell, where would the purity of aluminum come from?
Not typically used in probes, it is believed to be too high-priced, even for military applications. Especially in these distant years. The story of Frank Kimbler and his strange discovery was recently featured in the documentary series Alien Encounters: Fact or Fiction on the Discovery Channel.
Experts who examined one of the fragments said it provided “compelling evidence” that aliens actually crashed in the area decades ago. According to host Chrissy Newton, a former Pentagon ufologist (she did not provide his name) told her that similar pieces of pure aluminum have been found at other UFO crash sites.
Kimbler, who teaches geology at the New Mexico Military Institute when he's not looking for UFO remains, claims he pulled this particular piece from an anthill in a field near Roswell.
He says ants have long been renowned for bringing diminutive pieces of gold, copper, nickel, bronze and other minerals to their anthills, and people searching for these deposits often stirred up anthills to see if there was anything in those places. something valuable.
Kimbler also admits that not all of the strange debris he found could have come from UFOs. It is quite possible that some of it is simply garbage left by tourists. But some things can be “very interesting.”
Tom Hossain, chief scientist at Cerium Labs, where the Kimbler sample was tested, said the piece of aluminum was not only unusual in its purity, but also different from industrial aluminum used in various industries.
“Most of the aluminum used is anodized aluminum,” says Hossain. Anodizing is an electrochemical process that transforms a metal surface into a decorative, strong and corrosion-resistant coating known as anodic oxide.
This protects the metal beneath this finish from corrosion by reaction with oxygen molecules present in both air and water. Hossein also revealed that the fragment is not an alloy but in fact pure aluminum.
There are also known photos from Roswell, where the military examines what looks like pieces of foil. They were later found to be parts of a weather balloon.
But if the piece of aluminum Kimbler found is part of this “foil”, then this probe would be worth a fortune. Producing such pure aluminum is arduous and high-priced. And what purpose did pure aluminum serve in the probe? None of this would make sense if it was just a weather balloon.
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