The shattered Tunguska

 This is the morning. A rural area in Siberia. The Tunguska River, which carries a large body of water, seems to flow quietly. Across the river is a large forest. Mepitin is a fertile wheat farm. Several farmers appear to be busy with some work. It takes time. Suddenly there is a sound of the wind blowing.


Farmers stop their work for a moment and look around in amazement. A few seconds pass in silence. The next moment a huge, terrifying explosion is heard! The earth trembles. High pressure waves propagate everywhere. Unable to cope with the pressure, some of the farmers lose their balance and are thrown away like pieces of cotton.

The above is not a scene from a Hollywood movie. Many years ago, on June 30, 1908, an actual event took place in the Podkamennaya region near the Tunguska River in Siberia.

A huge object crashed into the Tunguska forest from the sky, releasing thousands of times as much energy as the Hiroshima atomic bomb (30 megatons of TNT), completely destroying 2,150 square kilometers of forest and 80 million trees. The shock waves spread up to 100 km from the blast site.

The eruption, which measured 5.0 on the Richter scale, is the largest eruption on Earth in recent history. Research has revealed that this celestial body exploded before colliding with the Earth. In fact, an earthquake of magnitude 5.0 could have caused much more catastrophe.

Since 1908, about a thousand research papers on the Tunguska incident have been published. The most recent report was released in 2013. Taken as a whole, these findings show that no definitive conclusion has yet been reached about the Tunguska eruption. Some say it crashed, while others say it was an alien spacecraft.

But the discovery of evidence from both sides of the aisle has further intensified the mystery. Scientists have found a number of fossils at the site that could be considered an asteroid, as well as mysterious pieces of metal that could not be traced back to any object. This piece of metal, found in the 70's, was found to contain large amounts of the elements cesium (Cs), lanthanum (La) and niobium (Nb). All three of these elements are extremely rare on Earth and have been identified as being broken by a large spherical object.



Whether it was an asteroid or an alien spacecraft or something else that exploded in Tunguska, scientists believe the explosion released high levels of radiation into the surrounding environment. This is due to the fact that 106 years after the eruption, some of the plants still occurring in the area show unusual features and animals such as insects have mutated bodies.


However, the conclusion reached by Russian scientist Yuri Lovebin, who published a research report on Tunguska in 2009, caused great controversy around the world. Even today, when you search the internet for "Tunguska", the first sites that appear are the ones that contain his research report.

Lovebin found several unusual quartz crystals at the site of the explosion. About 10 of these crystals had systematic circular holes in the center, and almost all of the crystals had different shapes.

Yuri Lovebin emphasizes that no device on earth can make such designs on quartz crystals, and assumes that the perforated crystals may be attached to each other like a chain. He also discovered a mineral compound called ferrum silicate, which could not be produced on Earth, in the presence of quartz crystals, the report said.

Lovebin found several unusual quartz crystals at the site of the explosion. About 10 of these crystals had systematic circular holes in the center, and almost all of the crystals had different shapes.

Yuri Lovebin emphasizes that no device on earth can make such designs on quartz crystals, and assumes that the perforated crystals may be attached to each other like a chain. He also discovered a mineral compound called ferrum silicate, which could not be produced on Earth, in the presence of quartz crystals, the report said.

This Russian scientist, who discusses all this at length through his report, has finally come to a disturbing, surprising conclusion. Let us conclude the article with that conclusion. Often he can be completely wrong. (This is a very difficult opinion to believe.) But perhaps he is right. What if he is right?

“A miraculous event has taken place in Tunguska. At first I was reluctant to believe it either. But now I have to accept that too. Some of you say that an asteroid crashed. Some say an alien spacecraft crashed. I mean, both of these things happened in Tunguska? Do you accept? Yes. Here a large asteroid crashed. But just as it was about to hit the ground, a mysterious plane collided with it. That is why the eruption that was to take place on the earth took place above the earth. The rock chain and other observations found by me and my team indicate that the spacecraft deliberately hit the asteroid. Maybe there were creatures there. Or it could be remotely operated. Whatever it is, they saved mankind from a catastrophe! ” -Yuri Lovebin

Comments