Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Aliens At Tunguska: Research-Skills To The Rescue...

Every so often, I run across a piece of UFO-debunkery that is so outrageously blatant and badly researched that it is flat-out funny. Case in point this week is an article by Nancy Atkinson over at Universe Today that has been miraculously picked up and quoted in its mis-representational entirety by many disparate sites that have, on the face of it, nothing to do with UFOs. Just Google 'Universe Today Tunguska UFO' to garner yourself the proverbial shit-load of hits-- you will find that the article is not so much news reportage as it is blog-wallpaper in certain e-sectors.

Interestingly, the sites that are post-proliferating said article are quoting it in its entirety, and with no attribution or acknowledgment of either the Universe Today website or the author of the article, Ms. Atkinson. This seems a mite odd, in terms of the speed-of-spread for the whole article online as well as with regard to the usual custom of attributing sources, which is markedly lacking in this case.

Also of interest is that Ms. Atkinson herself does not give proper attribution-of-source information for the Pravda (in English) article she haphazardly quotes in her hatchet-job post at Universe Today. (Again, just Google 'Universe Today Tunguska UFO' to read the full text of her article.)

Now, the reason I am bringing the whole thing up in the first place is that with 15 minutes, a computer with an internet connection, and some basic research and reference skills, what emerges is a very different scenario than the one Ms. Atkinson paints in her article. I work for a public library system in a large city, and as I routinely perform reference-work for folks doing research papers and the like, I know how to find periodical source material online. It is something I am paid to do on a daily basis, and I am good at my job.

The first thing I did was to copy the whole of Ms. Atkinson's article off of Universe Today, and drop it into a Word document. I then removed all of Ms. Atkinson's (biased and pejorative) personal opinions-- including her opening sentence, 'Classify this under new of the weird'-- and I was left with the following pieces of information:

A Russian scientist claims that aliens downed the Tunguska meteorite 101 years ago to protect our planet from devastation. Yuri Lavbin says he found unusual quartz crystals at the site of the massive Siberian explosion. Ten crystals have holes in them, placed so the stones can be united in a chain, and other have drawings on them. “We don’t have any technologies that can print such kind of drawings on crystals,” said Lavbin. “We also found ferrum silicate that can not be produced anywhere, except in space.”

A couple of expeditions have gone to the remote site of the crash. Lavbin says that one expedition located the unusual crystals.

Since there is stuff in quotation marks from a Russian scientist named Yuri Lavbin, it seemed safe to assume that the quoted-but-unattributed info in the Universe Today article was taken from an interview that must have been published somewhere. Inputting the Russian scientist's name and a few phrases from the unsourced material led me to an online news-clipping service, which identified my bits and pieces as coming from an article that was originally published online by the English version of the Russian paper Pravda. The news-clipping service also obligingly provided a link to the article itself, so I didn't have to Google it.

Upon reading the Pravda article-- awkward translation and all-- I found that it had been selectively quoted/heavily edited (to make it appear that there was nothing to the story) in the Universe Today post. Even though the translation of the Pravda article leaves a lot to be desired, it is still understandable by English speakers, and it tells a much different story than the Universe Today article presents. Here is the entire Pravda article (translation and spelling issues uncorrected):

Aliens downed Tunguska meteorite to save Earth

Translated by Lena Ksandinova

Aliens downed Tunguska meteorite to protect our planet from devastation, stated Russian scientist Yuriy Lavbin. He showed 10 quartz crystals that he found at the place of the meteorite’s crash. Several of the crystals have holes in between, so they can be united in a chain.

What could this chain serve for? Besides, some crystals have strange drawings on them. We don’t have any technologies that can print such kind of drawings on crystal. We also found ferrum silicate that can not be produced anywhere but in the space”, - the scientist states.

The meteorite’s crash took place long time ago, in summer of 1908. An enormous volcanic ball rushed over the sky with terrifying wallop and thunder-like sound. All the citizens were frightened to death and scared to move out of their houses. A flight of a “flamy alien” ended up in an hour in deserted taiga area. In a matter of seconds an explosive wave spread for 40 kilometers, devastating everything living around.

It was not until many years later that a Siberian scientist set up an expedition to place of the meteorite’s crash. They searched carefully through the river banks and found there unusual quartz boards. Mr. Lavbin states that such solid stones do not exist in the Earth. He said about the experiment that was taken on the crystals: scientists tried to put some of the same drawing that were on the stones initially with a laser machine.

How surprised they were to realize that the laser (that usually cuts metal objects into pieces) managed to put just some faint stripes. The stones though have an entire system of different lines and circles on them. Scientists suppose that the stones used to be a part of the navigational system of a spaceship. All stones united form a map, which they used to cruise through the Universe.

In 1908 the UFO is thought to be hit by the meteorite that weighed 1 billion tonnes. If the meteorite fell down on the Earth, all the people would have been dead. But the aliens interfered and put their lives to save our land. A strange portrait of a strange person on one of the stones proves this hypothesis. Isn’t it the pilot that once put his life for the sake of our future life?

When one looks at the ridiculously redacted information in the Universe Today article (with its accompanying dismissive editorial opinions) and then compares it to the Pravda article in its entirety, it is painfully clear that Ms. Atkinson wrote her piece not to report on the Pravda article, but to quash it. There can be no other reason for the scathing invective, the hatchet-work editing, and the non-attribution of the source.

The short-and-sweet of it is that the Universe Today article left out a lot of information that was in the Pravda article.

Next, I revisited Ms. Atkinson's dismissive remarks in light of the full Pravda article, and I became intrigued by the following assertion made by her--

While I’m not a chemist, I couldn’t find any information on “ferrum silicate.” Seemingly, it doesn’t exist.

My first thought was, "the translation of the Pravda article is so glitchy, I bet they mean something like ferrous silicate, rather than ferrum silicate." This confusion of terms is something that is seen a lot in library reference-work-- people think they have the correct name for something only to find out they don't when they try to look up information on the mistaken term. I duly Googled both terms and found out I was correct-- ferrous silicate does indeed exist, and it has sometimes been mistakenly referred to as ferrum silicate. Ferrous silicate is of great interest to anyone involved in metallurgy or glass manufacturing, and has been the subject of a whole lot of scientific research since the 1940s.

Here are two summary pages of professional papers detailing research into the properties of ferrous silicate. The first one is a recent abstract that is available on the subscription database SpringerLink, and the second is a paper from 1941 that can be found on Google Books:

Soft X-ray spectroscopy of ferrous silicates (on SpringerLink)

Charles G. Dodd and Paul H. Ribbe

Energy gaps and electrical conductivities in the ferrous silicates, Fe2SiO4 and FeSiO3, depend primarily on Fe-O bonding and may be studied by ultraviolet and soft X-ray spectroscopy. We have measured FeLII–III X-ray band spectra under conditions of 'minimal' (I4, at 4.0 keV) and 'high' (I10, at 10.0 keV) self absorption to determine 3d orbital energy levels, to delineate d states in the valence band, and to construct band gap models.


Research Article (1941)
The Specific Heats at Low Temperatures of Ferrous Silicate, Manganous Silicate and Zirconium Silicate

K.K. Kelley

The available low-temperature specific heat data for silicates are rather meager in spite of the wide interest in and importance of these substances as constituents of slags and glasses.

I have only given these two references, but there is tons more information (much of it highly technical) on ferrous silicate research online. To borrow (and correct) a phrase from the Pravda article, I think that a kind of 'ferrous silicate that can not be produced anywhere but in space', would be of intense interest to many, many people, as would be the fact that said ferrous silicate crystals are apparently darned near impervious to lasers.

Thus, the trash-it-fast agenda of the Universe Today article is exposed for what it is-- spinola designed to distract and/or discourage people from researching the actual story for themselves. No attribution of the Pravda article was given in the Universe Today article, because the spin-meisters do not want anyone looking at the Pravda article and/or taking it even half-way seriously. I can just hear the intel freak-out now-- 'Geez, not only are the Russians blabbing about laser-proof materials, there's a frikkin' alien face on the stuff they recovered! We have so-o-o gotta kill this story...'

In this case, there is already way too much bona-fide research posted online, and the spin is coming way too late.

Also, before I forget, the photo accompanying this article is from the Pravda article, and is an actual picture of part of what was recovered at Tunguska, according to Pravda. It is not a picture of 'supposed crystals', as the Universe Today article labels them. Of course, I leave it entirely up to the reader as to whether or not they wish to view the Pravda article as factual, but at this point, I'd say the Pravda article has way more going for it (in terms of a bona-fide news agency standing behind it as well as quotations and pictures from checkable sources) than the Universe Today hit-piece does.

Goddess, but I love my job...

10 comments:

marsandro said...

No doubt about it---

You are THE BEST!


Absolute Dynamite write-up!

:-)

Hathor -- On the podium with your Pulitzer Prize

;-)

Thorn Harefoot said...

Thank you [with blush inserted here]... I'm glad you enjoyed the write-up! The Universe Today article was so blatant, it was just begging to be deconstructed.

Also of interest is that a day or so after I posted my observations, I ran across a second article on the Tunguska UFO connection that was much longer (and much less inflammatory) at another science website. Instead of using 'cherry-picking' tactics and ridicule, it attempted to distract readers by starting out with a mention of the Tunguska UFO theory and then going sideways into a long explanation of the 'real cause of the Tunguska explosion': the atmospheric break-up of a small asteroid or cometary body.

Of course, one of the enduring mysteries of Tunguska is that there is no asteroid/meteorite/cometary debris to speak of anywhere, and those who have been honest about their research say that the actual cause of the Tunguska fireball is basically unknown.

Thus, the second article eschews the debunking tactics of battle-axe editing and vitriol in favor of 1) distraction from the original topic via a tangential line of thought, and 2) presenting theory (a possible fragmenting mini-asteroid) as if it were proven fact, which it is not. While it is more subtle than the Universe Today article, it is still trying to drive the viewpoint of the reader into the 'it was an asteroid that caused Tunguska' meme-groove.

The bottom line is, no one knows what the heck blew up above the ground at Tunguska, and if the Pravda account is taken at face value, apparently the Russians have discovered pieces of crystalline ferrous silicate at the blast site. That the ferrous silicate is decorated with various shapes and lines (and an alien face), shows signs of having been formed in space and is pretty much laser-proof, points to a technological origin for said ferrous silicate, and it certainly was not our 1908 technology that produced it.

I will try to find that second article and publish a link, as it is interesting to read from a 'how debunking works' point of view.

Peace,

T'Z

marsandro said...

Have you seen the

Greenland object?

:-)

Hathor -- On the satellite network

;-)

Starborne said...

Wow! It's been quite some time since I've visited, I love what you did with the place! :)

Not sure if it falls into the synchronicity bin, or if it's just a wonderful coincidence, but I've been hearing alot about Tuguska as of late.

I've heard a few different theories of what caused the blast, but nothing like this. The fact that there is tangeable evidence is nothing short of astonishing!

It is interesting to think just what these crystals were used for, let alone where they came from. The only thing I'd like to know is who they came from!

Thanks for posting such an interesting blog! I'm sure I'll be pondering and searching for weeks after this! lol!

Thorn Harefoot said...

Marsandro--

Yes, I did see the Greenland thingy, finally! I just needed to zoom out like crazy. I'm also enjoying the heck out of the pix at the dark Mission blog-- I can't imagine anyone buying any sort of 'columnar basalts/natural geology' (non-)explanation...

Starborne--

Glad you didn't find the change of window-dressing too disorienting.

It is also interesting that the whole Tunguska-crystals-thing popped up so recently again. As I have continued to research the original Pravda article, it turns out that the original story of 'anomalous findings at Tunguska' was first published back in 2004. This provides another novel twist to things-- I am now wondering why the recent Universe Today article appeared at all, seeing as the original news story is 5 years old at this point.

Peace,

T'Z

marsandro said...

Hi T'Zairis,

And no doubt you noted the
striations on the Greenland
object....

Note their similarity to the striations on
the Cassini object imaged at Saturn:

(URL must be "assembled" to work)

http://saturn.jpl.nasa.gov/
multimedia/images/raw/
casJPGFullS20/N00061934.jpg

This object has been "identified" as a
cylinder of length 50,000 km.

That's over three times the diameter of the
Earth.

:-)

Hathor -- Viewing the anomalies...

;-)

Thorn Harefoot said...

Yeah, that Cassini pic is nice!

The thing that makes me very interested in the cylinders is that some Native American elders have been quoted as saying that a part of their (heretofore unshared) oral tradition explains that they were either brought to Earth by large cylinders or they stayed underground for awhile in large cylinders. It's why Hopis use underground kivas for ceremonial purposes-- when they climb up the ladder and come out the top of the kiva, they are ritually reenacting their emergence into the Fifth World from inside a cylinder. That's why kivas are round, as well as below ground level.

Nancy Red Star has written some very interesting books which are essentially interviews with Native American altar-keepers and medicine-bundle holders, and they talk about this kind of stuff as they feel it is now time to share that knowledge with everyone. Hopi tradition says that they stayed in underground cylinders because the surface of the Earth was unsafe for awhile, while Lakota star-altar keepers talk about the Skypeople bringing them here 'from the Star Nations'.

Interestingly, I have several CDs by a Lakota musical group called 'Brule', and on one, there is a song that features a recorded speech by an elder who recounts that 'We came here from the Star Nations. The brought the People down to the surface of the Earth, and put us here...'

Peace,

T'Z

Starborne said...

It all comes back to the Hopi, doesn't it? We are the ones we have been waiting for... that's such a loaded statement.

I haven't heard about the Hopi talk about cylinders, then again I haven't been reading nearly enough as I should about them.

Marsandro-

Thanks for posting that great Cassini picture again, I lost the link recently! I was mainly looking for just the picture, but I remembered about the entire directory of raw images. My heart still skips a beat every time I see a shot of those rings, even if the shots are in B&W. :)

I've also seen the Greenland object, I'm also at a loss for words when I see it, but full of questions continually. I guess the image of the object is the one good part of "global warming"... the warmer it gets up there, the more will be exposed... unless someone is up there with oversized snow guns desperatly trying to cover it back up!

"Nothing to see here, move along now." lol!

Thorn Harefoot said...

Starborne--

If I recall my sources correctly, the Hopi only recently shared the cylinder stuff. I am thinking I read about it in one of Nancy Red Star's books, but I may be in error.

I've got some extra demands on my time at the moment-- the criminal trial for the guy who hit me last Dec. is coming up on June 19th-- so I am concentrating on getting some last-minute stuff to the DA's Office. However, as soon as the trial is over and done with, I'll go back through my Nancy Red Star books and see which elders she interviewed talked about it. I'm almost positive it was in one of her interviews, as a few of the elders she talked to are also Disclosure Project witnesses (they served in the armed forces, etc.) The info about kivas being 'ceremonial cylinders' was just so amazing that it really stuck with me, and I'll track down the source for you as soon as I've got a bit more time at my disposal.

Peace,

T'Z

Gort said...

I heard one time that Nikola Tesla thought he had caused the Tunguska explosion with his electricity transmitting experiment.
Don't remember where, but probably on Coast-to-Coast AM (Art Bell days --or nights)

BTW, (off topic) there is a new post on hhmsssword.blogspot.com with a scan of a leather notebook cover with Egyptian pictures and writing. (a cartuche in the upper center). And look at the inticate border closely....

Haven't seen you for awhile on Dark Mission blog... Hope all is well.
I really enjoyed the hilarious musings on your other blog (Radio Sutra) and I joined as a follower, although the google defaulted to "Gort Report" as my name/handle, and I submitted it before I realized I could have edited.
(now I have to figure out how to go back in and change.)

Gort