'Alien Aircraft' Material Test Results Published By The Pentagon
 Alien Life & UFO/UAPs
Tuesday 16th, July 2024
International
The All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO), the Department of Defense’s (DoD) dedicated UFO investigative body, has announced the findings of a comprehensive two year study conducted by Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) on a sample believed to be from an extraterrestrial aircraft. Contrary to initial claims, the analysis concluded that the material is likely an experimental alloy from the 20th century.

In a press release issued, AARO detailed the origins and properties of the specimen. "This specimen has been publicly alleged to be a component recovered from a crashed extraterrestrial vehicle in 1947, and purportedly exhibits extraordinary properties, such as functioning as a terahertz waveguide to generate antigravity capabilities", the AARO stated. However, after thorough investigation, they found no evidence to support these claims. "Considering all available evidence, AARO assesses that this specimen is likely a test object, a manufacturing product or byproduct, or a material component of aerospace performance studies to evaluate the properties of magnesium alloys".

The study, conducted by ORNL, revealed that the piece in question is a typical magnesium compound. “Although the origin, chain of custody, and ultimate purpose of this specimen remain unclear, a modern and robust analysis of its chemical and structural composition and properties does not indicate that its origin is non-terrestrial, nor do the data indicate that the material examined ever had the pure single-crystalline bismuth layer that could possibly have acted as a terahertz waveguide”, Oak Ridge reported.

The source of the material was the To The Stars Academy, an independent research organisation led by Tom DeLonge, former Blink-182 frontman and avid UFO enthusiast. The organisation had previously claimed in a press release that “the material is clearly engineered with distinct layers of MgZn and Bi at structured thicknesses only microns thick” and that “there is no precedent for this structured combination of materials”. ORNL agreed to analyse the specimen after receiving consent from To The Stars.

“Although the long chain of custody for this specimen cannot be verified, public and media interest in the specimen warranted a transparent investigation that adhered to the scientific method”, ORNL noted. They also addressed the claims regarding the specimen’s properties. “The specimen’s physiochemical properties are claimed to make the material capable of 'inertial mass reduction' (i.e., levitation or antigravity functionality), possibly attributable to the material’s bismuth and magnesium layers acting as a terahertz waveguide”.

According to both AARO and ORNL, the material is most likely an early test of new aerospace alloys developed in the 20th century. “There was widespread domestic research on [magnesium] alloys for airframes, engines, weapons, and delivery systems starting in 1915 and peaking during World War II”, the organisations reported.

The press release from AARO added, “Many experimental [magnesium] alloys failed for reasons not well understood at the time of testing, e.g., stress corrosion cracking. Unsurprisingly, records of failed [magnesium] alloy designs are scant. Neither AARO nor ORNL could verify the specimen’s historical origin. Unverifiable, conflicting personal accounts complicate its undocumented chain of custody”.

Though neither the press release nor the ORNL report explicitly mentioned Roswell, New Mexico, the 1947 recovery date coincides with the infamous Roswell incident, a cornerstone of UFO lore. The incident involved the alleged crash of an alien spacecraft near Roswell, which the US Air Force claimed was a weather balloon. Despite official explanations, speculation about the true nature of the crash has persisted for decades, fuelling ongoing public interest in UFO phenomena.

This renewed interest in unidentified aerial phenomena (UAPs) has been further amplified by recent high profile sightings and declassified videos of mysterious objects by US Navy pilots. This prompted US legislators to direct the Pentagon to investigate these phenomena, leading to the formation of AARO in 2022. Since then, the office has been diligently working to uncover the truth behind numerous UAP reports.
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