Grenbank UFO debris (photos), page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 1 times
Topic started on 22-1-2012 @ 06:30 AM by dadfortruth1
Before I get to the pics let me explain why I have these pics without a link to where i got them.

Lately I have been trying to remember the name to a book I read years ago, I remember being intriuged by the photo's in the book. well I just stumbled across it on-line "Alien honeycomb : the first solid evidence of UFOs"
written by John Pinkney and Leonard Ryzman.

The book has some great accounts of UFO sightings in Australia, and in particular it focused on the Greenbank UFO crash debris. and it includes some good photos of the debris. I was very happy that the full book is online and includes the pictures.
so I spend the next few hours reading over the story again.

Next I do a search on ATS and only found the case mentioned in an old thread or two, so I immediately start to put a thread together, first I download the pictures to my pc, than I go back to copy some quotes and the book is gone
I know it must be a coincedence and have been removed for copyright or some other mundane reason but it still freaked me out a liltle.
This is the link to where the book was posted
www.scribd.com...
eta Please disregard ATS member IsaacKoi found the link for me www.scribd.com...

There is not much on the web I could find about the case, if anyone could add a good link it would be appreciated.

The debris was found on different times between 1968 to 1975 on a ranch in the Australian town of Greenbank by Jean Fraser. The debris material was widley thought to be normal aircraft debris, and it does look very man-made imo.
But this also asks some questions. What aircraft did this come from? wouldnt someone have missed this plane? or did it manage to continue flying with the apperant damage?
could it have been somthing else like a satillite or top secret military craft? Lenticular Reentry Vehicle (LRV) was even considered Lenticular Reentry Vehicle (LRV)
www.military.com...
There was reportedly a large amount of interest from the RAAF

heres what Bill Chalker says ufoupdateslist.com...

It's seems to have been a long time since this debris has been talked about, so i'd love to hear what the ATS members think the crashed debris might originate.

I'm sorry I cant add more information as most of it came from the book, but I'm sure someone will be able to find more on he original case.

here are the pics.

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edit on 22/1/12 by dadfortruth1 because: (no reason given)
edit on 22/1/12 by dadfortruth1 because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 06:34 AM by IsaacKoi
Originally posted by dadfortruth1
Lately I have been trying to remember the name to a book I read years ago, I remember being intriuged by the photo's in the book. well I just stumbled across it on-line "Alien honeycomb : the first solid evidence of UFOs"
written by John Pinkney and Leonard Ryzman.
...

Next I do a search on ATS and only found the case mentioned in an old thread or two, so I immediately start to put a thread together, first I download the pictures to my pc, than I go back to copy some quotes and the book is gone
I know it must be a coincedence and have been removed for copyright or some other mundane reason but it still freaked me out a liltle.
This is the link to where the book was posted
www.scribd.com...



In fact, the book "Alien honeycomb : the first solid evidence of UFOs" by John Pinkney and Leonard Ryzman is still on Scribd.

See:

www.scribd.com...

In relation to analysis of the relevant "honeycomb" material, see also Bill Chalker's article at the link below in relation to this book:

www.project1947.com...

Bill's article included the following:


As an industrial chemist and someone who was promoting serious research into possible physical evidence for UFOs, I was interested in finding out more when the book first appeared. The authors did not assist independent research into their material. Based on visual assessments I had concluded the material was AEROWEB high strength honeycomb, some of which is made from fibreglass - a clearly human-sourced material. Soon other researchers,such as Paul Hebron, of UFO Research (Queensland), had acquired samples of the material from the site in question. A researcher working for sceptic Dick Smith received some of the "alien honeycomb" from the same person who provided the authors with their material. A clear relationship was established between this material and the material held by Pinkney and Ryzman. Dick Smith financed an analysis through Unisearch laboratories, and not surprisingly confirmed that the "alien honeycomb" was not so alien - it was fibreglass! So much for "the first solid evidence of UFOs." More compelling examples of unusual debris or material related to UFO events have been documented. However in this case it was clear that the material had nothing to do with UFOs.


edit on 22-1-2012 by IsaacKoi because: (no reason given)



reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 06:44 AM by dadfortruth1
reply to post by ProfessorT



It seems to consist of known Earth materials although has traces of titanium and other exotic elements and is a complex construction (for the time)
It also seems to have suffered burning that could have been caused by re-entry.

It's also reportely very light and a good heat insulator, which again makes me think satillite or rocket.


reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 06:46 AM by dadfortruth1
reply to post by IsaacKoi



hey thanks for that
not sure where i went wrong, I thought it had gone


reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 06:59 AM by dadfortruth1
reply to post by IsaacKoi




As an industrial chemist and someone who was promoting serious research into possible physical evidence for UFOs, I was interested in finding out more when the book first appeared. The authors did not assist independent research into their material. Based on visual assessments I had concluded the material was AEROWEB high strength honeycomb

After a simple google image search, it does look similar.
I guess the only questions are who's and what plane was this? was this "AEROWEB" used on most or all aircraft or more exotic planes back then? and why wasn't this plane missed by some one?


reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 07:32 AM by IsaacKoi
Originally posted by 2012king
its actually the insides of a catalytic converter
i am sure its been posted somewhere here before


Hi 2012king,

I think you have another incident/object in mind:

www.abovetopsecret.com...



Dadfortruth1 - I don't know if you got the brief U2U I sent to you earlier in case you want to edit your thread title to correct the typo (which refers to "Grenbank", instead of "Greenbank") before the edit window expires.


reply posted on 22-1-2012 @ 09:01 AM by 2012king
reply to post by IsaacKoi



yeah thats the one

i still think its the same stuff though, as in the pics it looks like some sort of heat wrap bandage around it, consistant with what you might find on an exhaust

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