Ancient Microscopic Objects
From The Book of THoTH (Leaves of Wisdom)
Gold prospectors in the Ural Mountains area of Russia found unusual, spiral-shaped artifacts made from copper, tungsten and molybdenum.
Tungsten is used for hardening special steels and for the filaments of light bulbs; molybdenum is used for hardening steel and giving anti-corrosion properties to tools.
The size of these artefacts range from 1.2 inches (3 cm) down to an incredible 0.003 millimeters, making them microscopic.
Exact measurements (using electronic microscopes) show that these tiny artifacts are constructed according to the “phi proportion” (also known as the “golden section”).
These microscopically tiny artifacts could be the product of highly advanced technology from the past, or could have fallen from space. They bear remarkable resemblances to control elements used in micro-miniature devices in our latest technology “nano-machines”. Most of these artifacts were found from 10 to 40 feet (3 to 12 meters) underground.
They have been examined and analysed at the Russian Academy of Science in Moscow, Syktyvkar, and St Petersburg, as well as the Helsinki Institute (Finland). Declared to be of technological origin, they are dated at thousands of years old, making them OOPArt, or out of place artifacts.



