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ORNL Synopsis: Analysis of a Metallic Specimen
2026-07-05 · Last updated July 5, 2026
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ORNL Synopsis: Analysis of a Metallic Specimen, released via The Black Vault, documents a scientific and forensic report on a metallic specimen studied in connection with UAP material research. com. pdf.
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ORNL Synopsis: Analysis of a Metallic Specimen, released via The Black Vault, documents a scientific and forensic report on a metallic specimen studied in connection with UAP material research. This report is part of the DoD/AARO collection, available at war.gov and documents2.theblackvault.com. The document was released through The Black Vault's archive, with a canonical PDF available at documents2.theblackvault.com/documents/dod/ORNL-Synopsis_Analysis_of_a_Metallic_Specimen.pdf. Synopsis: Analysis of a Metallic Specimen
Introduction
The All-Domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) sponsored a series of measurements on a layered material specimen primarily composed of magnesium and zinc, with bands of bismuth and other co-located trace elements. The material specimen, whose origin and purpose are of long and debated history, is claimed to be recovered from an unidentified anomalous phenomenon (UAP) crash in or around 1947. Furthermore, the specimen's physiochemical properties are claimed to make the material capable of "inertial mass reduction" (i.e., levitation or antigravity functionality), possibly attributable to the material's bismuth and magnesium layers acting as a terahertz waveguide. AARO, founded in 2022, is congressionally mandated to explore historical records of UAP incidents and publicly report its findings. Although the long chain of custody for this specimen cannot be verified, public and media interest in the specimen warranted a transparent investigation that adhered to the scientific method. Subsequent to the TTSA–DEVCOM CRADA, AARO secured science and technology partner Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL), one of 17 US Department of Energy national laboratories, to independently assess and perform thorough characterization studies on the specimen, leveraging ORNL's 80-year history of world-leading materials science expertise. ORNL, an expert in materials characterization, has the diverse staff expertise and co-located, powerful instrumentation suites to allow rigorous scientific inquiry beyond the capabilities of most individual laboratories. Therefore, it is a highly qualified institution to maintain scientific integrity in its unbiased analysis of this specimen and its properties. AARO tasked ORNL with assessing whether (1) the specimen is of terrestrial origin and (2) the bismuth in the specimen could act as a terahertz waveguide. DEVCOM Ground Vehicle System Center provided ORNL access to the metallic specimen—a single parent sample and three previously derived subsamples, all from the same material—beginning in February 2023. ORNL materials science analyses evaluated the sample's structure, chemical composition, and isotope ratios via multiple methods, including microscopy, spectroscopy, and spectrometry. Results align with previous DEVCOM analyses, indicating that the structure and composition of the bismuth layers do not meet the requirements necessary to serve as a terahertz waveguide. Furthermore, all data strongly support that the material is terrestrial in origin. The document's release was facilitated through The Black Vault's archive, with a canonical PDF available at documents2.theblackvault.com/documents/dod/ORNL-Synopsis_Analysis_of_a_Metallic_Specimen.pdf. This is what the public record looks like at its most ordinary. Storyflo.com.
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ORNL Synopsis: Analysis of a Metallic Specimen, released via The Black Vault, documents a scientific and forensic report on a metallic specimen studied in connection with UAP material research. com. pdf.
