Germany: Disk artefacts in crop circles
One of the largest and at that time the most complicated figures in Germany appeared on July 23.07.1991, 100. The shape was 55 meters long and 5500 meters wide. It was located in Grasdorf near Hildescheim (Lower Saxony, Germany). The figure covered an area of approximately XNUMX m2 and contained 7 symbols and 13 circles in the middle that looked like the ancient symbols of the sun. Generally, the symbols resembled Scandinavian rock paintings, the central theme of which was sun wagon - the sacred symbol of the Scandinavian and Nordic Teutons.
The location of the figure in the field itself is an archaeologically significant place at the foot of Thieberg, as there was an ancient Germanic settlement. There is also Wuldenberg within reach - another ancient German sacred place near Wotan, on which the church of Charlemange and the Holy Grove (Heilige Holz) from the Teutonic period were built.
Dr. Nowothing (Novotý?), A Hannovers archeologist, described the area as the most prehistoric cultural area in Europe.
So the question is: Was it a real pattern or a fake? The fact that when people went for walks around the person in question around 23:00 pm, there was nothing special in the field speaks for its authenticity. Shortly after midnight, the local parish of Grasdorf saw orange pulsing lights moving over the area in question.
The following day, the crowd visited thousands of people, and the field owner, local farmer Harenberg, began to pick up the admission to the field, following the pattern of his British colleagues.
Michael Hesemann wrote about the findings and subsequent analyzes. In the field - in the place of the figure, three circular plates were discovered - each of a different material: bronze, gold and silver. The plates contained identical symbols to those found in the field. Red dots indicate the exact location of each board.
The boards were presented at an international UFO conference: Dialogue with the universe in Düsseldorf (Germany) in October 1992. The albums were also part of a television documentary that partially dealt with the Grasdorf case produced by US-TV in April 1994. Subsequently, a lawyer from Tugingen, Dr. Roemer-Blum, funded a scientific analysis at the German Federal Institute for Materials Research. Their conclusion was: The silver plate consisted of pure silver with only 0,1% foreign matter. The weight of the board was 4,98 kg. The bronze plate was made of an alloy of copper and tin (15%), nickel and trace amounts of iron (less than 0,1%).
Spectrographic analysis showed that the material used was probably mined in the German Harz Forest near Grasdorf. The plates themselves were then made by heating the metals to the melting point or in a low gravity environment.
Let's mention a gold plate whose quality was expressed by the price of nearly 2 million CZK. The silver and bronze plates were then prized at 650 thousand CZK per unit.
Thinking of an enthusiastic cheater-millionaire he went so far as to invest a lot of money in getting such clean metals and then beautifully entertained the indirect publicity, it's pretty unlikely.




