Subj : Re: 3I/ATLAS To : k9zw From : roman Date : Thu Jul 31 2025 07:21:00 I will continue this topic again, I have published the full text on my Phlog. This is not all the news. In 2025, astronomer Beatriz Villarreal and her colleagues (https://shorturl.at/gUYLG) published a sensational study. By comparing old photographic plates from the 19th and 20th centuries with modern data, they discovered that thousands of stars seem to have vanished without a trace. But the most astonishing finding was the transient flashes - short-lived bursts that appeared and disappeared in the images. There were so many that the hypothesis of photographic artifacts was immediately dismissed. The programs recorded up to 5000 flickers per day, most frequently in regions of geostationary orbit. And these were not asteroids - since their glints would be chaotic - these objects produced clear, synchronized flashes. They are not satellites - since in the 1950s, satellites did not exist (unless: aliens?). Such flashes could theoretically be caused only by geometrically perfect structures resembling crystals, suggesting a hypothetical network of unknown objects. Alternative researchers are jubilant: perhaps this is the very shield hiding the true cosmos around us? Or an ancient orbital system of a lost civilization? There is no definitive answer yet. I haven't seen such strange activity around near-space topic in a long time. --- Mystic BBS v1.12 A48 (Linux/64) * Origin: Shipwrecks & Shibboleths [San Francisco, CA - USA] (700:100/72) .