[meteorite-list] Meteor may have landed in Area 52

From: countdeiro at earthlink.net <countdeiro_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Tue, 24 Nov 2009 14:43:41 -0500 (EST)
Message-ID: <14622554.1259091822167.JavaMail.root_at_wamui-cynical.atl.sa.earthlink.net>

As a long time neighbor (I have land in Nevada across the border north of Baker, Utah) of the Toole Facility, over the years I have met a number of scientists and test site workers. From what I gathered from them, the main problem with going into the restricted areas is that their are pockets of decomposed, but still toxic, chemical and bilogical agents.

I recall a flock of Basque owned sheep that grazed at the periphery and dropped dead in their tracks. The 22 year old herder by the name of Roberto Ergitui is said to have been found dead in his camp wagon with his dog. I wouldn't venture into the area even in the absence of patrols. There is a reason there are no ground patrols.

Count deiro

-----Original Message-----
>From: Meteorites USA <eric at meteoritesusa.com>
>Sent: Nov 24, 2009 3:24 AM
>To: "meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com" <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
>Subject: [meteorite-list] Meteor may have landed in Area 52
>
>Not something new, but something that I find rather, well, perplexing...
>
>Imagine the luck, or lack thereof for meteorite hunters and scientists,
>of the largest fireball in the United States in years, (at least since
>I've been into meteorites), most probably a decade, happening over one
>of the worlds most secretive and secure military bases on the face of
>the planet.
>
>I mean come on, what are the chances?
>
>Pretty good I would say... So is it there?
>
>You decide...
>
>---------------------------------------------
>By Michael McFall
>News Editor: The Daily Utah Chronicle
>Published: Friday, November 20, 2009
>Updated: Saturday, November 21, 2009
>http://www.dailyutahchronicle.com/news/meteor-may-have-landed-in-area-52-1.2092650
>
>Scientists have evidence that the massive meteor that turned the night
>sky into day for two seconds Wednesday night might have exploded in the
>atmosphere above the reputed Area 52?an extremely dangerous, mysterious
>patch of Utah desert.
>
>Patrick Wiggins, NASA Ambassador to Utah and Robert Matson, senior
>scientist for Applied Science International, believe the cosmic rock
>blew up as it burned through the atmosphere above Tooele County, based
>on interpretations of recorded seismic activity information and the
>meteor?s perceived trajectory. The meteor pieces would?ve landed within
>a mile of where the meteor exploded -- but unfortunately, that means
>they would have landed in the Dugway Proving Ground?an area of the
>western Utah desert, bigger than Rhode Island, where the U.S. Army tests
>chemical, biological and radioactive warfare, an area that is rumored to
>be the new Area 51.
>
>?It?s a restricted area,? Wiggins said. ?I seriously doubt anyone can go
>out there.?
>
>The U.S. Army tested thousands of bombs in the gigantic military
>reservation, according to the U.S. General Accounting Office. But the
>area is more colloquially known as Area 52 for all of the reported UFO
>sightings. Rumors circulate that the Dugway Proving Grounds is where the
>U.S. Government transferred all of the Area 51 alien research after
>public scrutiny drew too much attention.
>
>No military personnel have found a meteor shard, said Dugway Proving
>Ground spokesman Al Vogel.
>
>Wiggins said he heard a local Utah man is trying to get permission from
>the military to take an expedition out into the desert to find what?s
>left of the meteor, likely a straggler from the Leonid meteor shower
>that the Earth was passing.
>
>?I had one gentleman call me about an hour ago,? Vogel said. ?He works
>for the advertising agency as the Clark Planetarium as a client. He has
>friends who want to go meteor hunting.?
>
>Vogel is strongly discouraging anyone from venturing into ?Area 52?
>looking for the meteor. It?s an enormous remote desert with no cell
>phone reception, no military patrol passing any given area for more than
>a week, where they still regularly test weapons. There are even areas of
>the desert too dangerous even for approved military personnel to travel
>through, Vogel said.
>
>Relu Burlacu, seismograph network manager, said there?s nothing to
>suggest where the meteor pieces might have landed, based on the U?s
>seismograph station?s recorded activity from Wednesday?s early-morning
>hours.
>
>Vogel also denied that Dugway Proving Ground houses any alien
>technology, but acknowledged the reputation the military facility has
>garnered is entertaining to some of its employees.
>
>--------------------------------------------
>
>Enjoy...
>
>Regards,
>Eric Wichman
>Meteorites USA
>www.meteoritesusa.com
>
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Received on Tue 24 Nov 2009 02:43:41 PM PST


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