at way- with a ceramic?Maybe it
was some kind of early heat exchanger... or perhaps it was of extraterrestrial
origin. It needs some testing. Colin
- Original Message - From: Jones Beene To: vortex Sent: Thursday,
June 04, 2020 5:48 PM Subject: Re [Vo]:Pictures of debris from the R
Message - From: Jones Beene
To: vortex
Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2020 5:48 PM
Subject: Re [Vo]:Pictures of debris from the Roswell Crash Site
Good thing for us tree huggers that those aliens used catalytic converters on
their UFOs ... ;-)
Takes a lot of fuel to get here fr
Thank you Jones.
The part does look like a titanium oxide catalytic converter. I hope that I
have not been duped.
This is not to suggest that the artifact isn't of extraterrestrial origin...
I dont know it is of extraterrestrial origin. It was collected by an army man
on the cleanup crew who was attached to the Johnsville Navel station. A friend
of mine recently inherited it.
Frank
On Thu, Jun 4, 2020 at 5:48 PM Jones Beene wrote:
>
> This is not to suggest that the artifact isn't of extraterrestrial
> origin...
>
Thanks, Jones...I didn't want to say anything; but, it did look awfully
familiar...not at all like Art's Parts. 😉
Good thing for us tree huggers that those aliens used catalytic converters on
their UFOs ... ;-)
Takes a lot of fuel to get here from Proxima Centauri b and that is a big no-no
Actually (before someone brings up the point) - the catalytic converter was
indeed invented before the Roswell in
Subject: [Vo]:Pictures of debris from the Roswell Crash Site
Subject: Pictures of debris from the Roswell Crash Site
I had a chance to get my hands on the debris.
http://www.angelfire.com/scifi2/zpt/images/roswell.jpg
Frank Znidarsic
Subject: Pictures of debris from the Roswell Crash Site
I had a chance to get my hands on the debris.
http://www.angelfire.com/scifi2/zpt/images/roswell.jpg
Frank Znidarsic
I had a chance to get my hands on the debris.
http://www.angelfire.com/scifi2/zpt/images/roswell.jpg
Frank Znidarsic
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