Monday 28 March 2022

SOMERTON MAN TAMAM SHUD CASE: MICROCODE>>>> VIDEO REVEALS THE CONCEALED CODE... UPDATED 31st March 22

 

THE MICROCODE
VIDEO....

AND MORE- 31st March 22....

We have added some more examples from the V70 Title and inscription pages....






You are able to view this video on youtube in full-screen size.


ADDITIONAL IMAGES ADDED:


Extremely small examples, around the .25mm in height possibly.3 mm







This video was published almost 2 years ago, in May 2020.

It's quite short, 3.5 minutes or so, and as you will see it clearly shows the presence of microcode within the Boxall Rubaiyat, and it was found between the two pages that show the Jestyn inscription and the Title page. It was placed there in a way such that the casual viewer of those pages would have mistaken it for a shadow. It was only when I was able to examine that line in detail and to print it out in Best quality on a decent inkjet printer onto a sheet of 'bleed-proof' paper that the concealed code was revealed.

The concealment technique was described in two places, firstly in a 1911 US Military Intelligence publication in which they spoke of hiding code in page outlines or divisions and later in a 1943 SOE Document which described the INK H method as found on the Verse 70 pages, the Somerton Man Code page and the Tamam Shud torn slip of paper. There is another document currently being examined.

This is what I wrote at the time and published it beneath the You Tube video:


The Somerton Man case has produced some incredible finds in recent times but nothing that quite compares with the discovery of hidden micro code inside the copy of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam supposedly given by nurse, Jess Thomson to Army Lieutenant, Alf Boxall. 


Originally Jess when questioned by the South Australian Police about any knowledge she may have had about the Somerton Man and the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam book of Poetry, she said that she had once given a copy of the book to an Australian Army Lieutenant whom she met whilst she was working in Sydney as a trainee nurse.


At first the Police thought that Alf may have been the Somerton Man but on following up they traced him to his address in Sydney and confirmed that he had met Jess and that she had indeed given him a copy of the book. Alf produced the book and the Police went away satisfied that all was in order, 'Nothing to see here'.


It was some years later when Alf was interviewed by investigative reporter and barrister, Stuart Littlemore in a 1978 TV documentary on the Somerton Man case,  which by the way had also become known as the TAMAM SHUD case,  that he again produced the book complete with the inscription signed by 'JESTYN'. 

The book was inspected by Littlemore, but he didn't notice anything unusual about it.

 When Alf was asked a direct question as to his involvement with Intelligence during the war years, he was decidedly vague. It was a direct question that drew a subtle response. (https://youtu.be/FbQXgC0tDEo)


Espionage is 90% deception and Alf was a master at his craft. He had to have been well-trained to have had the confidence to show Littlemore the book knowing full well what it contained. He successfully deceived the barrister Littlemore regarding the true nature of the book and its concealed codes.


There are more videos online with even more game changing revelations about the Somerton Man case.

I have almost completed the book on the subject which will be available in the near future. It contains, amongst other things, many more images of the concealed codes with some deciphered lines.

Share:

1 comment:

  1. A little early to be certain but it looks as though we may have an MI6 link. Quite fascinating.

    ReplyDelete

Hi
Welcome to the Tamam Shud Blog, widely regarded as the most trusted fact and evidence-based blog on the Somerton Man case.
Visit our YouTube channel:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCOamLze8PyNDafjjBGGngJQ

ABOUT US and OUR RECORD

Learn more about, when the blog started our location plus a long list of 'finds' and new evidence discovered by this blog