Subject: Re: Robot Head found on the Moon
From: "Amanda Angelika" <manic_mandy@hotmail.com>
Date: 06/11/2006, 19:20
Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo

In news:i_G3h.9472$rn6.4283@newsfe1-win.ntli.net,
Amanda Angelika <manic_mandy@hotmail.com> typed:


I suppose it could be the wreckage of a Russian space craft, if those
are however human remains they would have to have been fairly recent,
there was to my knowledge no failed Russian manned moon landing, but
who knows perhaps it was carried out in secret and was never reported
because it failed, but if it isn't of earthly origin then it must be
ET. --
Amanda

Actually I have done a bit more checking on this and now think it is
possible that's not an android at all but is none other than Yuri Gagarin
himself

Gagarin apparently died on the 27th March 1968 in a MiG-15UTI on a routine
training flight near Kirzhachat. However what if that was a cover story and
in reality he had been sent to the Moon?

At the time the race was on to put a man on the Moon. The Russians had been
working to put a man on the moon since 1959 see:
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/R/Russian_manned_Moon.html

They would have most likely chosen Gagarin for such a mission because he had
been the first man in Space and was the Russian's best known cosmonaut, so
why not the first man on the Moon?

It is highly likely IMO they would have kept such a mission secret and would
have only announced it if it had been a success. It was never announced
because it failed and Gagarin was killed.

It is interesting to note there seem to be objects in this photograph
http://www.enterprisemission.com/images/data/5.jpg that seem to have red
paint on them Consistent with Soviet markings. Secondly there are parts
there that could be consistent with a Soviet Zond Lander module
http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/Z/Zond.html although heavily
wrecked and melted there are clear metal brackets on the piece of wreckage
in the foreground and other very mechanical looking parts

The other striking thing about it is although the skull looks more like
android than a human skull. It is highly likely that the space helmet or
other head gear would have melted in the searing heat of the crash leaving
parts of it melted and fused onto the skull.
http://starchild.gsfc.nasa.gov/Images/StarChild/space_level2/gagarin_big.gif
Although there does appear to be a small fragment of the helmet laying quite
near to the skull. IMO there is also a passing resemblance in the
physiognomy of the skull with Gargarin himself.

Of course I don't know if any of this is true, but if so it proves NASA went
to the Moon but  shows the US were probably not the first. In a strange sort
of Ironic way, it was perhaps fitting that the last men on the moon paid
tribute to the first.
-- Amanda