The couple from the town of Vale, Arizona, decided to arrange a family "photo session" in the vicinity against the backdrop of the Sonoran Desert landscapes and came across something very strange here - a pile of small purple spheres sparkling brightly in the sun.
Thousands of translucent balls scattered by someone on the ground occupied a rather large area, and were sticky and watery to the touch. When pressed, they burst, releasing a colorless, odorless liquid.
Geraldine Vargas and her husband had never seen anything like it. In addition, it was completely incomprehensible where the jelly-like spheres could come from in the middle of a completely deserted desert.
The spouses called their friend a zoologist and sent him pictures of the mysterious phenomenon, but no matter how hard he tried, he could not suggest anything worthwhile. Then the Vargas sent the photo to the KGUN-9 TV channel in the hope that they might be able to solve the mystery of the purple balls there.
The TV crew, sensing the sensation, immediately came and, having recorded the phenomenon, as well as taking "samples", contacted the management of the Tucson Botanical Garden, located in the desert.
After a preliminary study of the materials provided, Darlene Buhrow, one of the directors of the reserve, said that some types of mold or amazing jelly-like fungi can take such a strange shape.
Eyewitnesses, according to her hypothesis, could accidentally come across a scattered hydrogel for plant nutrition, only how it ended up in the desert is a big, big question.
In general, no one has yet determined exactly what the Vargas spouses discovered in the Sonoran Desert. Only one thing is obvious - this is clearly something extraordinary. However, not entirely unique.
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The fact is that exactly a year ago, a resident of the British city of Bournemouth, 61-year-old Steve Hornsby, witnessed a similar mysterious phenomenon. According to him, when he was in his house, the sky suddenly turned dark with a strange yellow tint, a thunderstorm broke out, and a heavy downpour with large hail began, which ended after a few seconds.
Going outside right after the storm, Steve noticed what looked like blue silicone balls lying on the lawn.
“I stepped on them with my foot and they burst instantly. Looking around, I saw a lot of other such balls. They were definitely not there before the storm began. They were of a jelly-like consistency, so it was almost impossible to take them with your hands,”said the former flight engineer.
He scooped up several incomprehensible slippery spheres with a diameter of three centimeters each in a glass jar with a spoon to take for analysis to researchers and thereby unravel the mystery of what happened, especially since nothing of the kind was found in the gardens of his neighbors, GlobalScience reported.
“These are the most unusual objects that I have ever seen - almost 20 whole spheres. They are odorless and do not sink, - said Steve. - I think that it may be some manifestation of atmospheric pollution by chemicals. I would like to do a chemical analysis of this unusual find to find out what these jelly-like balls are actually made of."
He also added that the balls did not dissolve in water, and he kept them in the refrigerator for a while, trying to figure out their nature on his own.
In turn, the local meteorological service reported that the discovered substance had nothing to do with meteorological phenomena.
Experts from the University of Bournemouth have suggested that the blue spheres are eggs of marine invertebrates. “Of course, it's still early for spawning, but the winter is very mild, so it may well be that these are eggs that were carried on their paws by a bird caught in a storm,” said Josie Pegg, an assistant at the Department of Applied Sciences with the most serious expression. - It is documented that birds can carry eggs, and if they get into the rain, it will wash it off their paws and onto the ground. I think this is the answer."
However, other researchers, with a lot of convolutions in the head, did not agree with this "solution", since there were no signs of embryos inside the transparent balls.
Moreover, having examined the samples using high-precision equipment, the scientists were discouraged by the results: the gelatinous lumps turned out to be almost 100% ordinary water! In this connection, it was suggested that the origin of the "eggs" is associated with the phenomena of plasma, which, as has recently been asserted, is involved in the formation of ball lightning.
True, ufologists, who carefully monitor the facts of the fallout of "anomalous precipitation" around the world, believe that, in general, there is nothing to understand. Everything has been clear for a long time already: jelly-like spheres and balls are clearly extraterrestrial in origin and are "waste" of UFOs, in particular, the remnants of spent fuel used by alien ships!
In principle, there is some truth in such a statement. Since the same Arizona Sonoran Desert, over which UFO flights are quite often recorded, has long been one of the most popular places of power on Earth, where unusual and very powerful energy flows of the planet intersect, thereby opening portals to other dimensions.
That is why today in the vastness of Sonora you can find whole groups of followers of the theory of the Great Mind, who at night, with the help of meditation, come into contact with the starry worlds …
Author: Gennady FEDOTOV