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TUNGUSKA: 90 Years After

Tunguska: 90 Years After 
Written By:Vladimir V. Rubtsov, Ph.D. 
Copyright (c) Research Institute on Anomalous Phenomena, Kharkov, Ukraine, 1998 
Posted:9:30 PM, September 21, 1999

This summer coincides with the 90th anniversary of the fall of the famous Tunguska space body (TSB). Any anniversary in science is a good opportunity to review previous work, even if there are no other obvious reasons for that. In this case, however, such reasons do exist. During the last years and decades the TSB investigators have been accumulating a vast amount of information on some TSB-related effects that were not previously studied in detail. These effects include, in particular, anomalies of thermoluminescence of the rocks and soils of the Tunguska area, the regional geomagnetic storm that followed the TSB explosion, atmospheric fallout of strange composition (mainly rare earths), and some other TSB traces that cannot find a place in the framework of the "classical" meteorite (or comet) conception of this event.

Conceivably we are on the threshold of obtaining a comprehensive data set that will allow to build a well-grounded model of the phenomenon. Of course, you can never be sure that the data set is comprehensive indeed. When building such a model, one cannot help but conjecture some its elements. (In fact, this is not so blameworthy: to verify these conjectures means to substantiate the model as a whole.) What is, however, definitely unacceptable in serious scientific research, that is the rejection of well established facts just because they do not correspond to a theoretical model.

In physics there has been developed an effective method of describing mathematically a complicated process or phenomenon which cannot be grasped at first glance. Having taken such a phenomenon in its simplest form and built a rigorous mathematical model, the scientist tries to add new components to the model so as to bring it closer to reality. Whether or not this procedure results in a successful solution of the problem, depends first of all on whether or not the original model reflects the essence of the process under consideration. If it is not the case, no additions, however sophisticated, can bring us to the truth.

The Tunguska event was initially classified as a usual meteorite fall. Its main anomalous feature - the overground character of the explosion - could not be perceived with this assumption in mind. Even after A.P.Kazantsev made out this feature, the "meteorite establishment" tried to convince the scientific community and the reading public that the explosion had been in fact of impact nature. The "disciplinary" values and restrictions proved to be of more importance than the general scientific ones (if we assume that the quest for truth is the main value for science). Formation of an alternative research community, working gratis, from disinterested enthusiasm (that has found its concentrated expression in IITE - the Interdisciplinary Independent Tunguska Expedition - see RB, Vol. 1, No. 3-4, p. 2) has resulted in a much broader freedom of discussion. By the way, this suggests that the "disciplinary values" in science are not purely "ideological".

But if inside this community the problem is now considered with due allowance to its real intricacy, the situation outside it is very different. More often that not (especially for Western scientists), the Tunguska phenomenon serves just as a pretext to build various mathematical models of impact processes in the Solar System, than as a real object of study. This is not useless in itself, but does not open up the way to the solution of this problem. The "logical" rigour of such models sharply contradicts their "empirical looseness".

If we imagine the main alternative ideas of the TSB origin in the form of two "skeletons" (N - "natural": an iron meteorite - a stone meteorite - a comet; A - artificial: an ET spacecraft), then we'll have to admit: the A-skeleton is gradually being filled in with flesh and life, whereas the integrity of the N-skeleton is being maintained only at the cost of ignoring the existing facts. Yes, the N-conception is based on the experience of meteor astronomy, and the A-conception on vague ideas of the "multitude of inhabited worlds". Yes, the former one is logically self-consistent, and the latter rather ambiguous (who can say he has any concrete idea of "possible" parameters of an ET spacecraft?). But the logic of the N-model tends to run counter to the empirical data, accumulated by a few generations of Tunguska researchers, while the "vague" (at first) A-model successfully assimilates these data, assuming a more definite shape.

One of the principal questions, to which the N- and A- conceptions answer in different ways, is the question of whether or not the Tunguska explosion was accompanied by nuclear reactions. Both V.K.Zhuravlev and B.F.Bidyukov, whose papers are published in this RB issue, have come to the same conclusion: it probably was. This result has been obtained independently and - what is very important - by different methods.

Strictly speaking, even if this conclusion proves to be correct, it will be just another argument in favor of the A-hypothesis, rather than its ultimate proof. Adherents of the N-hypothesis will certainly try to look for possible natural mechanisms of such a process. It is not improbable that they will succeed, at least to some extent. But when one model predicts new facts, and the other just tries to explain these facts post hoc, the former one should certainly be preferred.

Just as much, the conclusions reached by G.F.Plekhanov and L.G.Plekhanova in their paper "On a Possible Ricochet of the Tunguska Meteorite" hint at the artificial nature of the Tunguska space body. Although the paper has been written in terms of the N-conception, its results seem to fit naturally into the A-conception. In this case the latter tends however to go beyond the bounds of its simplest form (the catastrophe of an ET spacecraft before its landing on the Earth).

And last but not least, the 90th anniversary Tunguska RB issue appears to be a proper place to pay tribute to the late Dr. Alexey V. Zolotov, whose contribution to the development of the A-hypothesis may be safely called crucially important. Having introduced this hypothesis into science, Zolotov was for a long time looking for traces of the Tunguska nuclear explosion. It is a pity he did not live to see these traces discovered. It is fortunate that his work was not in vain.



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Dr. Rubtsov;

I read with interest your article "Tunguska: 90 Years After" Written By: Vladimir V. Rubtsov, Ph.D. (above).

I have information that may be of interest to you. It is an article entitled "The Great Siberian Explosion, 1908" by Christopher Montgomery. You can find it on our web site
https://www.angelfire.com/wa/UFORC/page78.html
Click here

My personal research was documented in my recent manuscript entitled UFOs: A SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY. For ordering information, go to Underground Books

I would like to ask your permission to post your article (listed above) as a hyperlink on our web site from our article. We will give you full recognition for your work, including an e-mail link back to your e-mail address.

You had mentioned that "rare earth" materials had been found. I believe that one of them was germanium. Is that correct?

This would make sense, as the UFO has been know to generate wavelengths that interact in our world in the form of radio frequencies, specifically radar wavelengths and their harmonics.

I know that science can not adequately explain the Tunguska explosion with the bolide/comet theory. AS a bolide can not change directions nor can it explode in the air nor can it be entirely anti-matter, as matter and anti-matter are in an exchange of gravitational forces.

I am an American and I love my country. I do not love their western science, nor their denial of the truth. With all due respect for your efforts,

Christopher Montgomery (Author)
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
UFORCE INTERNATIONAL GLOBAL NETWORK

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Rubtsov#091999R001-2
(Attachment enclosed)

Dear Mr. Montgomery:
I read with interest your article "Tunguska: 90 Years After"Written By: Vladimir V. Rubtsov, Ph.D..

Many thanks for your email, as well as for your interest to my article!


I have information that may be of interest to you. It is an article entitled "The Great Siberian Explosion, 1908" by Christopher Montgomery. You can find it on our web site located at this I-net address: https://www.angelfire.com/wa/UFORC/page78.html
This information was also documented in my recent book: UFOs: A SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY.

Of course, I will try to visit your web site as soon as our online possibilities broadens (at present they are, unfortunately, somewhat limited)!


I would like to ask your permission to post your article (listed above) as a hyperlink on our web site from our article. We will give you full recognition for your work, including an e-mail link back to your e-mail address.

Sure, you have my permission to repost this article. Please add also, if possible, the web address of RIAP (Research Institute on Anomalous Phenomena): http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Starship/1527/


You had mentioned that "rare earth" materials had been found. I believe that one of them was germanium. Is that correct?
No. There were found such rare earths as samarium, europium, terbium, ytterbium (especially), etc., but no germanium.

I hope this information would be helpful to you. Please also find here attached a RIAP flyer (file flyer.txt) that could be, as I hope, of some interest to you and your colleague at UFORCE.

All my best wishes and warmest regards!

Sincerely yours, Vladimir Rubtsov, Director, RIAP.


(The attachment was entitled the flyer.txt file


[FLYER TEXT FOLLOWS]

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Here is Rubtsow's attached text:

RESEARCH INSTITUTE ON ANOMALOUS PHENOMENA, KHARKOV, UKRAINE 


Research Institute on Anomalous Phenomena (RIAP) is an independent scientific-research body, established in Kharkov (Ukraine) in 1992 by the Kharkov-based Aerospace Company "Vertical". The Institute aims at scientific studies in the fields of the UFO problem and non-classical SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence). We make our investigations in close collaboration with the CIS Academy of Cosmonautics and Russian Academy of Sciences. The Scientific Council and Advisory Board of the Institute include such Russian and Ukrainian specialists in the SETI field, as well as in the UFO problem, as Dr. E.A.Ermilov (expert in radio detection of aerial anomalous phenomena), Dr. V.N.Fomenko (investigator of the famous Vashka find, as well as other supposed ET artifacts), Dr. L.M.Gindilis (astronomer and SETI expert), Dr. Y.V.Platov (Vice-Chairman of the Academic UFO Study Group), Dr. V.K.Zhuravlev (investigator of the Tunguska explosion), and others. The Advisory Board comprehends also a group of well-known Western scientists, scholars and engineers - V.-J.Ballester Olmos (Spain), Dr. T.E.Bullard (USA), Dr. R.F.Haines (USA), Dr. A.Meessen (Belgium), et al. Dr. Vladimir V. Rubtsov, Full Member of the CIS Academy of Cosmonautics, is Director of RIAP.

To inform the international anomalistic community about the results of investigations that are conducted by RIAP specialists and other scientists in the territory of the former Soviet Union, we started, in 1994, a special periodical: newsletter RIAP Bulletin (RB). It is the ONLY serious periodical of this kind in the Commonwealth of Independent States published IN ENGLISH. There appear in RB research reports, short communications, book reviews, letters to the Editor, etc. RB Vol. 1, Nos. 1-4 - Vol. 4, Nos. 1-4 have been printed and sent out to subscribers.

These issues contain, in particular, the papers "Post-Soviet Ufology: a View from Inside" and "Alternative Science?" by Dr. V.V.Rubtsov; "UFOs as Objects of Study by Terrestrial Physics" by Dr. V.A.Buerakov; "Search for Alien Artifacts on the Moon" by A.V.Arkhipov; "UFOs: a Possible Mechanism of Formation, Behavior and Environmental Impact" by V.I.Mazhuga, "The Petrozavodsk Phenomenon", by Dr. L.M.Gindilis & Y.K.Kolpakov; "The Black Ball: a Supposed Extraterrestrial Artifact", by Dr. V.N.Fomenko; "A Second UFO Landing on the River Mzha", by a group of RIAP scientists, and others. We have also published the first really comprehensive survey of anomalous features of the famous Tunguska explosion ("The Tunguska Meteorite: A Dead-Lock or the Start of a New Stage of Inquiry?"), written by the leading Russian specialist on this problem - Dr. Nikolay V. Vasilyev, Member of Academy.

There will appear in the next RB issues, in particular, the following papers: "A Possible Genetic Trace of the Tunguska Catastrophe of 1908", by Dr. Y.G.Rychkov; "UFOs: False and Genuine", by the Russian academic UFO expert Dr. Yu.V.Platov, "Did the Maori Know About the Rings of Jupiter?", by Dr. Y.N.Morozov, and many others.

RIAP Bulletin is published four times per year. Subscription rates: a life-long subscription - $100; 12 issues (three years) - $50; 8 issues (two years) - $35; 4 issues (one year) - $20. Airmail postage included. Back issues are still available in limited quantities ($5 per issue, $50 a whole set - eleven issues).

Institute mailing address: RIAP, P.O. Box 4684, 310022 Kharkov-22, Ukraine.
Internet e-mail address is riap777@chat.ru
Website: http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Starship/1527/




   


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