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🚨 THIS UFO STUDY WILL BREAK THE INTERNET. Years before the space program objects were photographed orbiting the Earth!? 🛸 Dr. Beatriz Villarroel lead a study into photographs of the night sky taken BEFORE satellites were invented (1957). Her team discovered that satellite-like objects were in orbit as early...

84,930 просмотров • 9 месяцев назад •via X (Twitter)

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🚨Prepare for a mind-bending deep dive into UFOs, “vanishing stars,” alien structures, and potential signs of non-human intelligence hidden in plain sight. Renowned astronomer Dr. Beatriz Villarroel (Beatriz Villarroel) first discovered nine “vanishing stars” in 1950s naval records. Some were clustered or aligned in ways that defy conventional explanation—anomalies that eerily coincide with the July 1952 D.C. UFO sightings. Her skepticism deepened when she examined the role of Donald Menzel—a prominent astronomer, notorious UFO debunker, and rumored naval insider. Menzel not only dismissed UFO reports but also halted Harvard’s full-sky survey from 1953 to 1967, raising questions about whether he was actively suppressing evidence. Determined to pursue answers, Villarroel expanded her efforts into Project Vasco, a data-analysis initiative designed to detect artificial non-human objects hidden in astronomical records. This led her to Exoprobe, a specialized telescope network focused on tracking potential alien artifacts in Earth’s orbit. She also turned her attention to the Baltic Sea anomaly—a “crashed UFO–like” formation off Sweden’s coast coated in charred biological material. This crash site could be evidence of non-human technology awaiting further investigation. From Europe’s crash-retrieval projects to revelations about disappearing stars, Villarroel is flipping mainstream astronomy on its head and forcing us to question everything we thought we knew about UFOs, alien life, and our place in a universe that may be far more crowded than we ever imagined. Key Revelations: 1. Baltic Sea Anomaly as a Non-Human Artifact: Beatriz may have spotted an alien structure off Sweden’s coast! It’s a mysterious 60–100 meter formation, inexplicably charred by biological material despite the absence of volcanic activity in the area. While early reports casually dismissed it as “just a rock” without rigorous sample analysis or peer-reviewed scrutiny, the evidence points to a far more intriguing possibility: a bona fide non-human artifact! 2. Vanishing Stars & Anomalous Redshifts: Studying archival observatory imagery from the early 1950s, Beatriz pinpointed specific cases of transient stars. Notably, she discovered a “triple transient”—three star-like objects that appeared together in a 1950s image but were completely missing in later observations. Even more puzzling was a narrow-band alignment of five stars from July 27, 1952, which vanished in the same way. This suggests an event or pattern beyond ordinary astrophysical explanations. These statistically significant disappearances align with the well-documented Washington, DC UFO sightings reported in July of 1952. 3. Project Vasco & the Exoprobe Initiative: Her current project, Project Vasco, is a rigorous, hypothesis-driven search for artificial non-human objects in astronomical data. By setting up a network of telescopes in New Mexico and leveraging advanced digital imaging and AI analysis, her team is filtering out modern space debris to identify genuine extraterrestrial probes. 4. The European Crash Retrieval Initiative: In Sweden, citizen scientists Tomas Bovinder and Alex Thorell are leading a groundbreaking project to pinpoint UFO crash sites across Europe. Beatriz states "We have a small database run by Vasco where we take in all the tips.”. This initiative not only digs into cold cases but also actively pursues fresh sightings, aiming to recover physical debris that could verify non-human technology. 5. Hypothesis-Driven UFO Research: Moving beyond vague “anomaly” searches, she advocates for experiments with a clear, testable focus. Her approach includes targeted studies designed to detect “flying saucer” signatures in both optical and infrared wavelengths. This approach, she contends, will yield clearer, falsifiable results and reduce the noise of generic UFO sightings.

Jesse Michels

124,080 просмотров • 1 год назад