The Ultimate Power Source - 10/28/97
Also see 11/05/97 update at end of page.
To: Jerry Decker
From: Mark Bennett
Website : BlackIce Subject: Rocks Jerry : Hi Mark!
Jerry : Say, did you ever find out anything about the guy in Wales, Arthur Adams who claimed to have duplicated Morays 50KW machine using a mineral that he says lies on the ground all over the island... Mark : I did one recon trip in the spring with a total mad science lunatic who was 100x times more talk than action. A horrific trip. Mark : Didn't find anything, but did photo's for dowsing later. Will be going back in a couple of weeks with a real dowser and try to come back with something. Will be shipping pieces off once we have something that is the same to avoid suppression. Jerry : most abundant or one of the most abundant minerals on the island...never have found out anymore on him...had a guy ask me if anything else was ever heard about him...I only had two newspaper shorts....seeya! Mark : Are those as hard copies or text files? Can I get copies? Here's what I have...
Ssh, don't tell a soul! Arthur's Stumbled on the secret of free electricity
There's more than a welcome in the Welsh hillsides, according to specialist metal prospector Arthur Adams. He reckons there could be a fortune in "magic" metal deposits -- similar to the chunk he's gouged out of a gold bearing mountain just off the Mawddach Estuary, North Wales. But so far, his accidental find -- a silver grey metal which he claims gives off electrical energy -- has brought cynicism and disbelief from mineral scientists and a warning under the Official Secrets Act. Arthur Adams, who lives quietly in a village near Ipswich says that there is enough of the material available to transform dramatically Britain's energy resources. In fact, to prove his point, he already claims to run clocks, a radio, and a small TV set at his home -- just by plugging into his piece of strange metal. Patented Geologists and mineralogists says there is no natural mineral on earth which they don't know about. And that no natural element could generate the prodigious electric energy claimed by Mr. Adams. Mr Adams, a retired ultra-sonic engineer and radiologist who once worked on Concorde, patented his discovery under a trade name. But the Ministry of Defence warned him in writing that his find was covered by the Official Secrets Acts. He was not to reveal the components of the substance or it's location. Mr. Adams is not an amiable crank. As a consultant specialist metal prospector, he uses a device of his own invention for detecting all types of minerals. He has been prospecting for years in the mineral rich area of the Mawddach Estuary where there are active gold mines and huge deposits of copper, zinc and lead. There are other rare metals there too. He said yesterday: "This substance is a combination of natural elements in a hitherto undiscovered form and which could have taken tens of thousands of years to discover scientifically." "I have analysed it and I know what it is, but for the time being I have been ordered to keep the secret." The energy source he says he has discovered is like a huge natural battery in the earth -- and it has nothing to do with the fusion of zinc and copper. "Believe me" he said earnestly "this is big, very big indeed. "it can produce a limitless supply of power... it gives off huge voltages and amps and it is self-regenerating." Doubts What is more, he claims to have synthesised the metal. He can produce it himself. Although he is bound to secrecy until the Government scientists have investigated the metal, Mr. Adams revealed some fascinating possibilities for it. A piece no bigger that a shirt button could replace batteries in cars and commercial vehicles. A slab half the size of a shoe box could provide all the power and light for a normal three up and two down family house -- for next to nothing. Officials at the Institute of Geological Scientists who prospect for and map minerals in Britain said yesterday: "We have not discovered any minerals with these properties. If it is a substance unknown to science it is extremely exciting -- but we doubt it." But Arthur Adams is unabashed. He is content to await a verdict of the Government scientists. As one mineralogist said: "It is highly unlikely that he has discovered a new substance -- but who knows? Stranger things have happened..." Written by John Christopher (publication unknown)
New Information from a man who knew Adams - 11/05/97
Date: Tue, 04 Nov 1997 12:01:57 +0000
From: Dave Saltrese
To: Jerry Decker
Subject: The Ultimate Power Source Hi Jerry I found the file "The Ultimate Power Source" very interesting as I live in Wales (It's not an island yet we are still attached to the UK.) As regards to the "Rock," I have a small piece which was given to me by Len Adams about ten years ago. Who I knew as Len. He used to call the rock "Why," it was a bit of a joke, because when he demonstrated it, onlookers would always shout out "Why does it do it?" To come to the rock material or Why, - it is a class of petrovoltaic of which there seems to be quite a few. I have found Bornite (copper iron sulfide) will give the same results. Place the rock in dish with a few drops of water, wait for the rock to absorb some of the moisture and it will the act like a battery. The output power is QUITE LOW - about 100 microamps. It will run a low inertia motor, it looks impressive but the motor will work on a lemon. As far as I know Len did not run his TV or radio off the rock, that was media hype. I was told the rock came more from the mid-Wales end of the country. That would make sense to me as the Bulith Wells area is volcanic and the rock is full of sulphide. If you would like any more info please let me know. I do reasearch in free energy and have been doing work on the anomalies of planar transistors. Thank you for such a good web site. Best Regards - Dave Saltrese
Update 05/17/08 - Additional info from; http://www.geocities.com/Hollywood/Park/4065/berwyn.html
At 8.30 PM on 23 January, 1974, a large disc-like craft was seen to fall from the skies over Clwyd in Wales. Dozens of witnesses across Lancashire and Cheshire had phoned the police earlier that evening after seeing a strange formation of green lights flying erratically over the skies of the north-west. At exactly 8.38 PM, something impacted into the Berwyn Mountains in Clwyd, and the resulting tremor - which measured 4.5 on the Richter Scale - was felt in Wrexham, Chester, Liverpool, Southport, and even in some areas of Greater Manchester.
A nurse who lived near the scene of the impact told a local newspaper that a flying saucer 'the size of the Albert Hall' had smashed into a mountain, throwing debris and bodies for over a mile. She said she walked up to one of the bodies, and realised it wasn't human, but before she could describe what she had seen, the military intervened, and two Ministry of Defence officials ordered her to remain silent about the UFO because her comments 'would constitute a threat to national security and the defence of the realm'.
That nurse has never been seen in the area since, and the news reporter who visited the scene of the alleged crash refused to talk about the incident up until his death in 1979.
In 1980, an electronics engineer named Arthur Adams, who had worked on Concorde, visited the Berwyn UFO crash-site and found strange green coloured pieces of metal embedded in the rocks there. He took samples of the metal to his laboratory and discovered that a sample the size of a 1-inch cube gave off two kilowatts of electricity, when wired up to a volt meter. Mr Adams contacted the Daily Express, and they published a series of articles about the strange find, but the Ministry of Defence stepped in and killed the story.