Should military reveal alien pods used to transport life to planet earth?
Georgia50
2011/09/18 03:38:32
Seems like this is a highly obscure story. Large larva-like pods have been found in various places around the world. Visually, there is no evidence of life. The pod appears to either discarded or is no longer useful. In almost every case, the small end of the pod is missing, suggesting that whoever or whatever was in the capsule, roughly the size of a VW Beetle, has exited.

Pictured above is a pod. The jagged edge to the right is where exit was made, although the artifact above suffered fractures in transit. The actual hole is slightly larger than a volleyball.
Once transported to a secret location, scientists first place the pod into a custom-designed heating element. A direct current then raises the temperature to 3,500 degrees F in a vacuum environment. It's thought that no living matter of any kind can survive that treatment. The pod is then removed from the heating element and is left to cool on the ground. After a week of cooling, analysis of the pod's cell structure begins. Thus far, no known elements on earth bear any resemblance to the elements that make up the pod. Initially, it was thought the pod could be cooled faster by immersing it in hot water. That was a disaster...the pod burst into a million pieces from thermal shock.

Pictured here is a pod being removed after being subject to intense heat. Notice the smaller exit hole to the right.
The location and sources of these photos is not known at this time. Contacted for an opinion, Prof. Justin S. Whaymeist, Oxford University, believes this is a carefully orchestrated hoax.

Pictured above is a pod. The jagged edge to the right is where exit was made, although the artifact above suffered fractures in transit. The actual hole is slightly larger than a volleyball.
Once transported to a secret location, scientists first place the pod into a custom-designed heating element. A direct current then raises the temperature to 3,500 degrees F in a vacuum environment. It's thought that no living matter of any kind can survive that treatment. The pod is then removed from the heating element and is left to cool on the ground. After a week of cooling, analysis of the pod's cell structure begins. Thus far, no known elements on earth bear any resemblance to the elements that make up the pod. Initially, it was thought the pod could be cooled faster by immersing it in hot water. That was a disaster...the pod burst into a million pieces from thermal shock.

Pictured here is a pod being removed after being subject to intense heat. Notice the smaller exit hole to the right.
The location and sources of these photos is not known at this time. Contacted for an opinion, Prof. Justin S. Whaymeist, Oxford University, believes this is a carefully orchestrated hoax.

















Someone is having a joke.
Shown are fused silica cones. Sand is super-heated and forms the cone inside the thermal vessel. It's more like 1500 F, an they really did learn the hard way about submersing in water to cool them. There's a 3/4 inch shell that is removed from the outside, partially reusable. What remains is ground to various grades and sold to processors. These photos are from this particular producer's web site.
http://pemco-niagara.com/inde...
Finally, the professor's name is an anagram of "just messin with ya."