Silicon Valley (USA) Physical debris obtained through on field research of alleged UFO crashes in Colombia and Argentina, is now being studied by scientists. Dr. Jacques Vallée has collected purported metal debris from UFO cases dating as far back as 1947, that experts are analyzing in a state-of-the-art laboratory at Stanford University.

The breakthrough has come with the invention of a machine that enables scientists to look at the atomic structure of a selected material. At that microscopic level, the atomic structure is impossible to fake. This device is called a “multi-parameter ion beam imager” which Dr. Garry Nolan, a Stanford microbiologist, is using to create a revolutionary three-dimensional image to analyze the samples right down to their individual atoms. The process is called “Multiplexed Ion Beam Imaging” or in short MIBI. When Dr. Nolan placed some of the fragments in the vacuum chamber of his instrument, he was astonished to find their composition was unlike any known metal. No matter where he looked in the sample’s jumble of elements, whether magnesium, iron, nickel or titanium, the ratio of isotopes didn’t make any sense.

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