‘Alien’ Rock With Mysterious Magnetic Powers Could Finally Reveal the Truth Behind the 7-Decade-Old Rockwell UFO Crash Incident

By Krisana Estaura, | April 11, 2017

The rock, found in 2004, has strange carvings and allegedly has magnetic powers that scientists cannot explain. (YouTube)

The rock, found in 2004, has strange carvings and allegedly has magnetic powers that scientists cannot explain. (YouTube)

A strange object commonly known as the Roswell Rock found near a UFO crash site in New Mexico continues to spark wild conspiracy theories 13 years after its discovery.

The rock, found in 2004, has strange carvings and allegedly has magnetic powers that Science cannot explain. Its mystery was discussed in a video by Tyler Glockner, founder of the alien hunting website Secure Team 10.

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The Mirror reported that Glockner, a conspiracy theorist, claims that the rock may have been part of the wreckage from the Roswell crash in 1947 or was left behind by a previous alien visitation. He also believes that the crash may have occurred when these aliens returned to Earth in an attempt to retrieve the mystery rock

"The rock was very smooth, rounded, and it contained these mysterious symbols that looked to show almost what looks like a lunar cycle of the Moon," he said.

The Roswell crash is one of the widely investigated UFO conspiracy theory of all times. Interest in the case has not waned despite the U.S. military releasing a report in the 1990s that the object found at the crash site, believed to be an alien space craft, was a nuclear test surveillance balloon.

Conspiracy theorists believe that the bodies of extraterrestrial beings were also found at the crash site, but this is being covered up by the military.

The Daily Mail reported that the Roswell Rock is said to have perplexing magnetic properties. It is said to spin counter-clockwise if a magnet is held to the north-end of the rock. Opposite effect occurs when held at the southern end.

The video by Glockner claims that based on X-rays and CT scans, there is no evidence of magnets place inside the rock, which could, in turn, suggest that it is a hoax. Moreover, it is also said not to contain any natural minerals which would explain its magnetism.

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