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Photos Of George Adamski

George Adamski – who lived in the USA, a Polish immigrant that was fascinated with astronomy and Eastern philosophy. In the early 1930-ies, living in Laguna beach, Adamski founded the "Royal order of Tibet," which held its meetings in the "Temple of scientific philosophy." In 1940 Adamski and his wife and a few close friends moved to a ranch near mount Palomar, California, where he lectured on Eastern philosophy and religion. But worldwide fame brought him not that.

George Adamski was the first and most famous contactee (or at least one of the first: in 1935, a Theosophist guy Ballard claimed to have met with 12 Venusians in a cavern, where he received a lot of information). He has provided the public with many photos and videos of flying saucers, and published the book "Flying saucers have landed" (1953, in collaboration with Desmond Climbed) and "Inside the space ships" (1955), which by 1960 was sold 200 000 copies.

His photographs were so popular that in 1978 even appeared on postage stamps. This happened after the Prime Minister of Grenada sir Gary Gairy in October 1977, addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations, calling for more detailed study of flying saucers.

 

 

This popularity Adamski acquired immediately. After the first statements about contacts with aliens, almost all ufologists were against him. They believed such stories of fraudulent and damaging serious research flying objects of unknown origin, as well as their researchers. Later this attitude towards Adamski was only the skeptics.

Consider the story of his contacts.

Almost immediately after June 24 1947 when he was born the phenomenon of "flying saucers", Adamski began to talk with his followers in the religious community about observations through a telescope cigar-shaped (and then disc) "spaceship" from other worlds. According to him, the ship he saw almost a year before Arnold, October 9, 1946, during the observation of the meteor stream in a six-inch telescope in a wooden Observatory, which was built in the campground Palomar gardens.

Soon, Adamski began to hold paid lectures about UFOs, in which he argued that "the government and science has established the existence of UFOs two years earlier, via radar tracking of the spacecraft with a length of 700 feet on the other side of the moon", "science now knows that all planets in the solar system inhabited" and "photos of Mars taken from the Observatory mount Palomar, show that the channels on Mars created by humanoids, whose intelligence is much higher than any human on earth."

Nationwide fame came to Adamski in July 1951, when the magazine FATE published an article, illustrated by photographs of UFOs.

November 20, 1952, Adamski was out with friends for a picnic in the Mojave desert (CA). Suddenly they noticed in the sky a cigar-shaped object, which are separated by a silver disc-shaped object that descended to the earth at a distance of 0.5 km from witnesses. Considering that the ship is looking for him, Adamski left his friends and went to him. He later said that he had contact with an alien from Venus: the ship came out a beautiful dark-skinned humanoid with blonde hair in shiny, like foil, a suit without seams and began to telepathically communicate with Adamski. In confirmation of his words, Adamski made plaster casts of the footprints of a stranger, on which were seen the mysterious symbols.

December 13, 1952 at his home at Palomar gardens, Adamski has made three very clear photos of flying saucers. Later they became the most famous UFO photos of the time, and the depicted object was the prototype for UFOs in the movies, cartoons and toys.

In 1962, Adamski announced that he was going to take part in the interplanetary conference on the planet Saturn. In 1963, he had a secret audience with Pope John XXIII, which he held at the request of the aliens because of the decision of the Pope not to communicate with them directly. At this meeting, he allegedly received from His Holiness "Golden medal of honor", which, according to skeptics, in fact, was a typical tourist souvenir, made by the Milanese company (Adamski my friends showed medal in a cheap plastic box, and that's what this souvenir was sold in the tourist shops of Rome).

February 26, 1965 in the house of Rodeffer in Maryland in preparation for the next conference on the topic of flying saucers Adamski took a short video with swirling between the trees a UFO.

Criticism

Naturally, statements about encounters with aliens has been heavily criticized by both skeptics and the majority of ufologists. First of all it was noticed that Adamski described a light-skinned humanoid aliens from Venus, Mars and other planets was not viable in the known environment of these cosmic bodies.

The photographs that Adamski had shown until 1952, was the image of the moon taken with his 6-inch telescope. On top of the moon was superimposed images of cigar-shaped, round or elliptical objects. It was obvious that Adamski was doing the negatives with the photos of the moon and just drew them with a fountain pen with black pharmaceutical ink. In 1953, Arthur C. Clarke pointed out that Adamski sometimes painted saucer outside a circular field of view of the telescope: so that such an image was the real object had to be inside the tube of the telescope.

A UFO researcher from Richard Hayden compared the description Adamski the weather on the day of one of the contacts with the official data on meteorological conditions in the same region. They were totally different. Unfortunately, accurate data Hayden indicates.

Mark Hulett (Marc Hallet) indicates:

The book "Inside the Space Ships (ITSS)", written by Charlotte Blodgett on the basis that she was told by Adamski, first published in 1955.

Adamski and his supporters claimed that the book contains a description of a phenomenon about which could know only real space traveler: "fireflies", which are the natural little luminous particles filling the space between the planets. According to Adamski, American astronauts and Russian cosmonauts have seen these "fireflies" during space travel in the years after the book's publication. This is a Prime example of the lies that have been repeated hundreds of times. In fact, the particles seen by astronauts and cosmonauts, came from their own capsules and never taken them for a natural phenomenon.

According to Adamski himself (see "Farewell to flying saucers", the Chapter "Answers to skeptics"), the aliens told him about the radiation belts van Allen in 1953 and he wrote about them in "ITSS" long before they were discovered by the satellite Explorer IV. However, if we atraem page 91-92 "ITSS", which indicated Adamski, we will see that they are talking about the artificial radiation zone created by nuclear explosions, not natural radiation belts van Allen. In 1963, when he wrote "Farewell to flying saucers", Adamski still believed that the van Allen belt of artificial origin, but this assertion was refuted by many subsequent space research and experiments conducted by scientists of the Earth.

In fact, "Inside The Space Ships" is nothing more than a sci-Fi book, it is very similar to the remake of the sci-Fi novel "Pioneers of space" ("Pioneers in Space"), which Adamski wrote in 1949.

Mark Hulett talks about his study of the famous film Adamski:

My friend Mae Morlet-Flitcroft confidently told me that this film can not be faked. She was so sure that gave me her personal copy (received directly from Adamski) and asked for an expert opinion. [...] A few days later (in 1976) I put the film under a professional microscope Olympus to examine some very important shots: the Venusian scout ship, it seemed, went ahead and passed over the branch of a tree. I focused on this thread and found that the particle density of the emulsion was higher than it is at the point of intersection between the exploration and the branch. In other words, two objects were superimposed on each other and it was undeniable evidence that the film was a fake created using a double exposure.

Mark Hulett compares aliens Adamski's description of the alien in the story of Oscar John. Freund's "the Kid from Mars", published in September 1940 in the magazine "Science fiction" – a beautiful blond astronaut in the clothing, tight-fitting neck, wrist and ankles, with a wide belt.

In articles about the Adamski photographs often mention that famous photo reconnaissance aircraft of Venus has been retouched. Moreover, he published two different versions of the same photos that looked different because of the tints and manipulation when printing. As a result, they were more like drawings than photos. It should be noted that Adamski has always refused to provide the negatives of their photographs for research.

But those pictures looked like photos, caused a lot of issues. In the first place seemed suspicious resemblance of a flying saucer with a lamp, decorated with balls for table tennis. In particular, a comparison of the Adamski UFO with elements of lamps manufactured at that time made employees "CISU Viterbo". The similarity is impressive. In source list there is a link to a directory, similar lamps can be found on their own. The same version was confirmed by the expert Walter Riedel, finding the similarity of UFO Adamski bulbs with General Electric.

Less well-known photograph of Adamski commented French ufologist Henry Durrant:

it was just a part of the lamp of the incubator with three balls ping-pong table in the lower part, which were used to simulate the chassis"

According to researchers, for a film made in the house of Rodeffer, Adamski used a half model of the drive attached to the glass plate. This helped to create the effects, according to Adamski, the distortion caused by the electromagnetic field of the alien ship.

These photos have not paid attention to even the military. The document of the Ministry of the Air Force of the United States from 20 April 1966, Colonel Frederick H. Farringer in response to a request of Senator Morse writes (the document refers to the famous photograph of George Adamski, dated December 13, 1952, which depicts the elusive Venusian flying saucer over mount Palomar in California):

Photograph of Adamski were analyzed by the air force. The object depicted in the photograph was identified as the lid of a snuffbox with three balls ping-pong table, attached below, and a pacifier from a baby bottle at the top.

Besides the obvious similarities of detail of flying saucers on the Adamski photographs with household items there is another detail, revealing the photograph that is large-scale models is the problem of focus. Distant object in the photo must be either completely in focus, or completely out of focus. On the Adamski photos in focus are only a few details of space alien ships that could be obtained only when the recording is not very large object at very close range.

 

All the facts above speak in favor of apparent intentional falsification not only photos and videos but also the whole history of Adamski as a whole. Here for review we have given only basic information. A more detailed description of the history and research can be found in the links listed in the sources.

Translated by «Yandex.Translator»

Это интересно 

George Adamski became the first (or at least one of the first) and most famous contactee in 1947. He provided the public with many photographs and videos of flying saucers, and also published the books "Flying saucers have landed" (1953, co-authored with Desmond Lezley) and "Inside the space ships" (1955), which by 1960 had sold 200,000 copies.  His photographs were so popular that in 1978 they even appeared on postage stamps.

George Adamski became one of the first contactees.  Until 1947, only a certain theosophist Guy Ballard in 1935 claimed to have repeatedly met with 12 Venusians in a cave, where he received a lot of information.

In 1953, Arthur C. Clarke pointed out that Adamski sometimes drew a saucer outside the circular field of view of the telescope: for such an image to be authentic, the object had to be inside the telescope tube

Mark Hallett compares the aliens described by the famous contactee Adamski with the description of an alien in Oscar J. Friend's short story "The Child from Mars", published in September 1940 in Science Fiction magazine: a handsome blond cosmonaut in clothes tightly fitting his neck, wrists and ankles, with a wide belt


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