Russian
Alien Spaceship Claims Raise Eyebrows, Skepticism
By
Robert Roy Britt
Senior Science Writer
12 August 2004
space.com
An
expedition of Russian researchers claims to have found evidence that an alien
spaceship had something to do with a huge explosion over Siberia in 1908. Experts
in asteroids and comets have long said the massive blast was caused by a space
rock.
The
new ET claim is "a rather stupid hoax," one scientist said today. And
it's one with a rich history.
The
latest claim was written up by news wires and was making the Internet rounds Thursday
morning. According to Agence France Presse, the scientists say they've found "an
extra-terrestrial device" that explains "one of the 20th Century's biggest
scientific mysteries," a catastrophe that flattened some 800 square miles
of Siberian forest in a region called Tunguska.
Various
other news reports told of a "technical device" and "a large block
made with metal." The researchers were said to chip a piece off for laboratory
study.
Most
scientists think the Siberian devastation was caused by a large meteorite which,
instead of hitting the ground, exploded above the surface.
'Plan
to uncover evidence'
The
Russian research team is called the Tunguska Space Phenomenon foundation and is
led by Yuri Labvin. He said in late July that an expedition to the scene would
seek evidence that aliens were involved.
"We
intend to uncover evidences that will prove the fact that it was not a meteorite
that rammed the Earth, but a UFO," Labvin was quoted by the Russian newspaper
Pravda on July 29.
"I'm
afraid this is a rather stupid hoax," said Benny Peiser, a researcher at
Liverpool John Moores University in the UK. "The Russian team stupidly stated
long before they went to Siberia that the main intention of their expedition was
to find the remnants of an 'alien spaceship!' And bingo! A week later, that's
what they claim to have found."
Peiser
studies catastrophic events and related scientific processes and media reports.
He runs an electronic newsletter, CCNet, which is among the most comprehensive
running catalogues on the subject.
"It's
a rather sad comment on the current state of the anything-goes attitudes among
some 'science' correspondents that such blatant rubbish is being reported -- without
the slightest hint of skepticism," Peiser told SPACE.com.
Longstanding
mystery
Asteroid
experts don't have all the answers for what happened at Tunguska. There were few
witnesses in the remote region and the explosion left no crater.
But
the available evidence, along with modern computer modeling and general knowledge
of space rocks, leaves little doubt in most scientific minds as to what happened.
Author
Roy Gallant spent 10 years investigating the scene of the event for his book,
"Meteorite Hunter: The Search for Siberian Meteorite Craters" (McGraw-Hill,
2002).
In
an interview with SPACE.com when the book was published, Gallant said scientists
are gathering "accumulating evidence tending to support the notion that the
exploding object was a comet nucleus. This is the collective opinion of most Russian
investigators; although some say they cannot confidently rule out a stony asteroid."
Peiser
said there is a "general consensus" among experts worldwide that the
culprit was an exploding comet or asteroid.
"Not
surprisingly, the blast did not leave any remains of the object intact,"
Peiser said. "However, researchers claim to have found evidence of increased
levels of cosmic dust particles in Greenland ice cores which are dated to 1908
and which they link to the Tunguska event of the same year."
Longstanding
speculation
Speculation
about aliens and Tunguska go way back. And there is a reason: No other visitor
from space -- natural or otherwise -- has had such a well-documented impact on
daily life in modern history.
The
explosion on June 30, 1908 was equivalent to 20 million tons of TNT.
"Witnesses
twenty to forty miles from the impact point experienced a sudden thermal blast
that could be felt through several layers of clothing," writes Jim Oberg
in "UFOs & Outer Space Mysteries" (Donning Press, 1984). The blast
was recorded as an earthquake at several weather stations in Siberia."
In
Europe, it didn't get dark that night. People said they could read the newspaper
by the light of the mysterious blast, Oberg reports. Telescope operators in America
noticed degraded sky conditions for months.
No
crater was found, and wild speculation ensued.
Enter
sci-fi
Struck
by the similarity of Tunguska and Hiroshima decades later, a science fiction writer
named Kazantsev wrote a story in which the Tunguska blast was the exploding nuclear
power plant of a spaceship from Mars, according to Oberg.
A
few Russian scientists took up the cause and claimed to find various bits of evidence
-- never substantiated -- for a civilized alien explanation. Oberg wrote in 1984
that even then, as evidence built for a natural cause, a handful of "spaceship
buffs seem to have grown more desperate, but no less effective, in corralling
the public's attention." He said annually some unsuspecting journalist would
stumble on the claims and write about them, setting off a fresh round of public
speculation.
On
that front, little has changed since 1984.
Astronomer
Philip Plait, author of the myth-debunking book Bad Astronomy (Wiley & Sons,
2002), agrees with Peiser that the Russian researchers intention for finding ET-evidence
hurts their case.
"They
are not undertaking a scientific expedition, that is, an unbiased investigation
to see what happened," Plait said Thursday via e-mail. "They are going
to try to prove their preconceived ideas. That's not science, that's religion.
And it almost certainly means that they are more willing to ignore or play down
any evidence that it was a comet or rock impact, while playing up anything they
find consistent with their hypothesis."
Prove
it
Whatever
anyone believes, Plait points out that proof is what's important.
"I
am not saying they didn't find an alien ship. I am saying that it's a) unlikely
in the extreme, and b) they are predisposed to make such claims, which means we
need to be very skeptical, even more so than usual in such cases. If they provide
sufficient evidence, then scientists are obligated to investigate, of course.
But given everything I've read, their evidence to even consider a non-natural
cause is pretty weak."
Plait
has even thought about what evidence might be necessary. A chunk of debris would
help, but not just any sort of material.
"It
would need a weird ratio of isotopes, for examples, or clear evidence of long
duration space travel," he said. "Even then they must be careful; manmade
space debris rains down on Earth all the time."
Plait,
a naturally skeptical person, is willing to wait and see.
"Let's
see what these guys bring back," he said. "In the end, it's not what
they can claim but what they can support with factual evidence that counts. The
burden of proof is clearly -- and heavily-- on them."