[meteorite-list] Star Jelly & Angel Hair

dorifry dorifry at embarqmail.com
Wed Dec 14 10:46:21 EST 2011


Angel hair sometime falls in a jelly form. Unlike star jelly, it doesn't 
originate from meteors, it comes from ionized air created by the 
electomagnetic fields of UFOS.

Phil Whitmer

Joshua Tree Earth & Space Museum

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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angel_hair_(folklore)
Angel hair (folklore)
>From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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This article is about Angel hair as in UFOs. For angel hair pasta, see 
Capellini.
Angel hair or siliceous cotton is a substance said to be dispersed from UFOs 
as they fly overhead. It has been described as being like a cobweb or a 
jelly.[1][2][3] It has also been reported at sightings of the Virgin 
Mary.[4][5]

It is named for its similarity to fine hair, or spider webs. Reports of 
angel hair say that it disintegrates or evaporates within a short time of 
forming.[1][6][7][8] One theory is that it is "ionized air sleeting off an 
electromagnetic field" that surrounds a UFO.[9] It is an important aspect of 
Raëlism.[2]

      Contents
      [hide]
        a.. 1 Sightings
        b.. 2 Published explanations
        c.. 3 Angel grass
        d.. 4 See also
        e.. 5 References
        f.. 6 External links


[edit] Sightings
There have been many reports of falls of angel hair around the world.

Angel hair was reported at the Miracle at Fatima on the 13th of September 
and October 1917.[10]

The most reported incidence occurred in Oloron, France in 1952.[2]

On October 27, 1954, Gennaro Lucetti and Pietro Lastrucci stood on the 
balcony of a hotel in St. Mark's Square in Venice and saw two "shining 
spindles" flying across the sky leaving a trail of the angel hair.[1]

In the Portuguese city of Évora on November 2, 1959, angel hair was 
collected and analyzed at the microscope by local school director and later 
by armed forces technicians and scientists of the University of Lisbon. 
Conclusions were not possible although it was formed, apparently, by a small 
organism featuring 10 'arms' stretching from a central core. It was advanced 
that it could be a single-celled organism of some kind. This event followed 
the sighting, by the population of the city, of several UFOs. Angel hair was 
also spotted in the same day, at the Air Force Base of Sintra, several 
kilometers to the north.[citation needed]

[edit] Published explanations
Explanations based on known phenomena include:

  a.. Some types of spiders are known to migrate through the air, sometimes 
in large numbers, on cobweb gliders.[5] Many cases of angel hair were 
nothing other than these spider threads and, in one occasion, small spiders 
have been found on the material.[8]
  b.. Atmospheric electricity may cause floating dust particles to become 
polarized, and attraction between these polarized dust particles may cause 
them to join together, to form long filaments.[11]
  c.. On two occasions a sample was sent for testing once on the 13 of 
October in 1917 a sample found at Cova da Iria was sent to Lisbon and on 
October 17, 1957 another sample found at Cova da Iria and examined. The 
analysis of this proved to be natural consisting of white flakes. When put 
under a microscope it was found to be a vegetable product not animal.[10]
Explanations related to Unidentified Flying Objects include:

  a.. Ionized air may be sleeting off the electromagnetic field that 
surrounds a UFO.[9]
  b.. Excess energy converted into matter.[1]
  c.. The usage by UFOs of a G-field would cause heavy atoms in ordinary air 
to react among themselves and produce a kind of precipitate that falls to 
the ground and disappears as the ionization decreases.[12]
[edit] Angel grass
"Angel grass" is a related phenomenon. It is when short metallic threads 
fall from the sky, often forming intertwined loosed masses.[8] They are a 
type of Chaff, a radar counter-measure which can be in the form of fine 
strands, which is dropped by some military aircraft.[8] It can also come 
from sounding rockets and balloons, which would have released it at high 
altitude for radar tracking.[8]



Angel hair sometime falls  in a jelly form. Unlike star jelly, it doesn't 
originate from meteors, it comes from ionized air from the electomagnetic 
fields of UFOS.

Phil Whitmer

Joshua Tree Earth & Space Museum




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