Who Made These 2.8 Billion-Years-Old, Perfectly Balanced and Adamant Spheres?
2.8 Billion-years-old spherical artifacts were returned from a mine in South Africa,
and since then have puzzled the scientific world and mystery hunters alike.
What was the purpose served by these out-of-place objects?
And who were their users?
Attested historic evidence of ancient advanced civilizations stretches back more than 4,500
years, to a time when the Sumerians living in ancient Mesopotamia were busy writing poems
and fighting wars.
This tiny span of time compared to the universal timescale highlights the many possible gaps
in our history books.
One of the constant contributors to the pile of rubble lying on top of challenging historic
vestiges is war.
It had been waged since time immemorial and played a decisive role in demolishing or covering
up all traces of once-lofty cultures.
But fortunately, the latest laser scanning technology is uncovering numerous breadcrumbs
from remote times which prove that our forefathers possessed advanced notions of a great deal
of things, opposite to how currently attested history wants us to believe.
As evidence of their exceptional achievements stand a collection of artifacts that were
unearthed from inside a South African mine.
The out-of-place-objects, as they were dubbed, were comprised of a series of various metallic
spheres with smooth coating, concentric grooves around their circumference, and one inch diameter
in average.
Probably the most intriguing aspect was their age � dated to about 2,8 billion years back.
According to researchers, the Klerksdorp Spheres stand proof of a remote race with exceeding
technological capabilities that could create perfect spheres with the aid of complex devices,
possibly through molding.
It would be close to impossible for a modern sculptor to replicate such perfectly round
stones, at least not without specific tools.
Part of these enigmatic stones are kept at the Museum of Klerksdorp in South Africa,
where interested parts are free to gather more insight into these artifacts.
Here�s what Museum Curator Roelf Marx has to say about this:
The sphere are a complete mystery.
They look man-made, yet at the time in Earth�s history when they came to rest in this rock,
no intelligent life existed.
They�re nothing like I�ve ever seen before.
They are found in phyrophylite, which is mined in South Africa.
this phyrophylite is a quite soft mineral with a count of only 3 on the Mohs� scale
and was formed by sedimentation about 2.8 billion years ago.
On the other hand, the globes which have a fibrous structure on the inside with a shell
around it, are very hard and cannot be scratched, not even with steel.�
The Klerksdorp spheres have a different material consistency than the pyrophylite from which
they were extracted, thus hinting at their possible artificial nature, rather than resultant
of a natural phenomenon.
This intriguing aspects has made those researching the spheres wonder if they were not manufactured
by a long-forgotten civilization.
With a spherical design and colors varying between dark-blue, hazel, and chestnut color,
these puzzling artifacts seem to hold more questions than answers.
Were they utilized in some sort of ancient ritual?
Or rather their petite size and almost flawless execution indicate that these could have been
used as ornaments or decorative body accessories by a former 2.8 billion years old culture?
Another remarkable attribute resulted upon inspection was the extreme balance of these
out-of-place objects.
Intrigued about this, Mr. Hund of Pietersburg who also had a similar stone from a different
mine near Ottosdal, had forwarded an inquiry along with the material evidence he had in
his possession to the California Space Institute at the University of California, from where
Hund received more baffling news.
It turned out that the balance is so fine, it exceeds the limit of their measuring technology
and these are the guys who make gyro-compasses for NASA,� Hund said after receiving the
results.
He went on offering more details about the unusual spheres which were �balanced to
within one-hundred-thousands of an inch from absolute perfection.� According to investigators
working at NASA, no current technology would be able to replicate something as finely balanced,
unless the process would occur in zero gravity or space.
The second proposed hypothesis involved the erratic work of nature, but some traits are
hard, if not impossible to relate to this scenario.
Mr. Hund noted all his particularities regarding the Klerksdorp spheres, as well as points
of view shared by other fellow researchers and scientists he had discussed with, in a
letter that, for a while, was displayed at the museum of out-of-place-objects in South
Africa.
I was intrigued by the form of the spheres, grooves around the middle and the fact that
they are as hard as steel, while the material � phyrophylite � in which they are found,
is as soft as limestone with a count of only 3 on the Moh scale.
They vary in size from 30 to 50 mm in diameter and have perfectly concentric grooves round
the center as if they were molded.
Inside the hard shell, some have a spongy substance, while in others resembles charcoal.�
The spheres were found several decades back and had gained much infamy since then.
They became targeted by witch-doctors who sought them for their alleged magic powers
and at one point in time a sagoma (mage) deliberately stole some of the spheres from the museum
to enhance his rituals and magic powers.
The stolen spheres were never returned.
After the immensurable span of time in which the Klerksdorp spheres were subjected to various
forces inside Earth�s crust, their intended use became unclear and their alleged magic
properties questionable.
Nevertheless, the strangeness of these out-of-place-artifacts is not to be denied, and the role they might
have played for our extremely ancient forefathers.
More than 200 such spheres were recovered from the Wonderstone Silver Mine in South
Africa, a region where traces of previously unknown cultures have recently been brought
to light.
The alloy used to cover the spheres is made of a nickel and steel, a composition that
doesn�t occur naturally.
Some have shells of about a quarter of an inch thick, and when split in half, an unknown
substance is revealed which breaks down into particles upon first air contact.
With so many mysteries in a nutshell, the Klerksdorp spheres have made some truth seekers
wonder if they might not have been related to, or used by the Anunnaki who are believed
to have established a mining operation facility right on the plains of South Africa more than
200,000 years ago.
The artifacts are however dated to a much further date, to a time where not even our
imagination can stretch.
With this in mind, it�s possible that some historical facts had been erroneously interpreted
by modern science, and pieces of the puzzle are finally starting to complete the main
picture which seems rather challenging for the established paradigm.
Although time has taken its toll on these unusual artifacts and has made them indecipherable,
it wasn�t enough to stop human curiosity from attributing them otherworldly origins
and uses.
One thing remains certain though � their ancient creators, whoever they were, possessed
advanced notions and techniques that exceeded by far the scientific interpretation attributed
by modern man.
Whatever the case, the Klerksdorp spheres remain one of those mysteries extremely hard
to crack.
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