EVEN A CHILD CAN DO THIS....
A very short post, the above is an example of micro-written letters and shapes with a PigPen coded message just for fun. The interesting thing about this little collage is that it was done by a 9-year-old, her Mum thought I would like it and dropped it off a couple of weeks ago. Amazing skill for a young child.
The letters at the top of the page are the alphabet in fact it's been written 8 times along and underneath the wavy line. She wrote the alphabet 4 times along the top line from left to right and the bottom line in reverse, 4 times and they matched. The writing is between .7 mm and 1.1 mm in height. That is how the code page and, for that matter, the code within the torn piece and the Boxall Rubaiyat pages was completed.
The fish was very clever, it is quite a skill to space the letters and words as well as form them into a shape as this young child did. If you look carefully she had actually drawn a faint outline in pencil and then by eye, she wrote the words into the shape. That is how the illustration on the Boxall Rubaiyat inscription page was coded.
Now imagine this, the letters at the top could be readily covered over in ink and you would find it hard to discern the lettering beneath it. You could remove the short piece of paper and the only trace of the tiny written letters would be the indentations left as a result of those letters being written.
It really is that simple.
This is how the Somerton Man code page was written, one piece of paper resting on the back of a copy of the Rubaiyat, the microcode written into the shape or form of letters. This was the method described in the 1943 SOE manual. The same technique was specified by Teltscher when he designed the Hay Internment Camp Banknotes in 1941. Teltscher returned to the UK later that same year and went to work for British Military.
This is not speculation, this is proven and demonstrable fact. The audience was quite amazed when I demonstrated this at SAPOL museum in November last year, and yes they saw it including the micro handwritten letters and numbers on the code page and the Boxall Rubaiyat. The torn slip was not part of that particular demonstration, time did not permit but it was included in the information package as requested for the report to the coroner.
Just to be clear on this, the Police are looking to establish whether or not the man whose remains were exhumed was in fact the man on whom the autopsy was performed by Dr. Dwyer. Was this man the Somerton Man is the only question that will be addressed. There is now only one way that can be done and that is by matching the dental chart taken by Dwyer with the dental chart of the exhumed remains, even then, they need to match the DNA of the exhumed teeth with the other bone samples amongts the remains.
Will leave this up for a day or so.