UFO Wreck? - Alternative View

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UFO Wreck? - Alternative View
UFO Wreck? - Alternative View

Video: UFO Wreck? - Alternative View

Video: UFO Wreck? - Alternative View
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Local ufologists are trying to find out the origin of a piece of gray metal found on the Kola Peninsula after an unidentified flying object fell there; scientists suggest that this is a fragment of an extraterrestrial civilization

- The so-called UFO wreck is stored in this iron box.

In 1965, the inhabitants of the Kola Peninsula observed a flight and then an explosion of a luminous body. In the early 90s, Perm geologist-ufologist Emil Bachurin sent an expedition to the site of the fall of the unknown object, where he discovered a piece of gray metal. Before the scientist's death, the find passed to his colleague Nikolai Subbotin. He spent a lot of money analyzing the plate.

Nikolay Subbotin, ufologist:

- They brought it to Moscow, sawed it into 4 parts. The first result was obtained already in Moscow. It turned out to be tungsten with a purity of 99.9%.

According to the conclusion, this piece of tungsten was grown in an unknown way from extremely purified powder. In 65, not a single country in the world had any installations capable of creating such processing conditions. Later, specialists from the laboratory of the Perm Technical University found one hundredth of impurities in the metal. And the scientists of the Yekaterinburg Institute of Superconductivity made out lead and nickel in these impurities. It remains to find out the terrestrial or extraterrestrial origin of this find.

Nikolay Subbotin, ufologist:

- Now we will try to talk to the specialists of the State University at the Department of Solid State Physics. Perhaps we will be able to get some new results.

The owner of the tungsten wanted to know how the piece of processed metal got to the peninsula? With Nikolai's permission, the Perm State University technicians split the sample, analyzed it, and concluded that it was ordinary tungsten used in rocketry.

Anatoly Volyntsev, Head of the Department of Solid State Physics, Perm State University:

- They usually do this way and made various products for rocket technology, including nozzle elements, those structural elements that can be exposed to elements of high temperatures.

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By the way, Nikolai has information that in the 60s of the last century, heavy intercontinental missiles were tested on the Kola Peninsula. There is a possibility that this piece of tungsten could be a fragment of a heat-resistant rocket ring or part of an engine. But the ufologist is ready to continue his research. He has already received proposals in this regard from specialists of the American Aerospace Center.