Coral Hull: Testimony: Fallen Angels Exposed: The Dyatlov Pass Incident: "Bigfoot" and "UFO" Injuries [3]: Radiation Burns: Skin & Clothes

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CORAL HULL: THE DYATLOV PASS INCIDENT
"BIGFOOT" AND "UFO" INJURIES [3]: RADIATION BURNS: SKIN & CLOTHES

Several Witnesses And Family Members Reported Strange Discoloration On The Bodies Of The Victims.

WHAT THEY SAW AT THE FUNERAL

Yuri Kuntsevitch, the head of the Dyatlov Foundation in Yekaterinburg, said: “At that time I lived next to the cemetery, and was 12 years old, so I was really interested. I tried to push through the crowd to see everything, but it was impossible. I was amazed by some of the people in the crowd. They were wearing trilby style felt hats and had jodhpurs or motorcycle riding pants. They were supervising the procession with their faces blank, expressing nothing. I was standing on a pile of earth at the graveside and I was about eight meters from the bodies. Their skin had a somewhat brick color, and I saw some of the students helping to lower the coffins to the graves. It was said they were there despite being forbidden to leave their classes to attend."
[Teodora Hadjiyska, Dyatlov Pass website, http://dyatlov-pass.com/funerals-09-march-1959]

"... the hair on his temples turned grey as his childhood friend L. Kadochnikov, noticed at Rustem's funeral when he saw Slobin's face in the open coffin."
[p76, Dyatlov Pass Keeps Its Secret, Irina and Vlad Lobatchev, Amanda Bosworth, Parallel World Books, 2013]

"Several witnesses and family members reported strange discoloration on the bodies of the victims. One of the family members compared their skin color to those of the people of African descent.
[The Dyatlov Pass Incident, part 2, The Cloaked Hedgehog, https://thecloakedhedgehog.wordpress.com/2013/06/05/the-dyatlov-pass-incident-part-2/]

"High doses of radiation can cause rapid browning of skin, known as "nuclear tan" [Radiation Burn, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_burn]

WHAT WAS IN THE AUTOPSY REPORTS?

When a person dies, the blood that fills their skin dies and so they become a grey white colour. This was not the case with the Dyatlov group, whose skin was multi-coloured. The autopsy reports mentions the following colours, in association with the skin of the deceased hikers: blue-red, reddish purple, pink and brown-red, bluish red, bright red, bluish pink, purple-red, pink, pinkish red, brown-cherry-red, purple-green, red-green and yellowish brown. This also appears to include atrophied skin, where in the cases of Yuri Krivonischenko, Yuri Doroshenko, Zinaida Kolmogorova, Rustem Slobodin, it is described as having; "the venous pattern [as] is well-defined."

When radiation burns occur as a result of a nuclear accident ...

"The survivors have atrophied skin which is spider veined and with underlying fibrosis.[14] The burns may manifest at different times at different body areas. The Chernobyl liquidators burns first appeared on wrists, face, neck and feet, followed by chest and back, then by knees, hips and buttocks.[47]" [Radiation Burn, Wikipedia, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radiation_burn]

EVIDENCE OF EXPOSURE TO RADIATION BURNS

Yuri Krivonischenko
"The external ears are swollen and blue-red in colour."
"The skin of the chest, neck and limbs down to the wrists is reddish purple in colour with the showing of the venous system on the limbs."
"On the surface of the left buttocks and thigh, parts of the soft tissue are pink and brown-red in colour."
[Note: Lyudmila wore a short sleeve shirt, long sleeve shirt, and two sweaters. The brown sweater belonged to Krivonischenko - one of the two found beneath the cedar, and lately tested radioactive.]
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Yuri Doroshenko
"Crimson purple post-mortem stains are located on the back of the neck, torso and limbs."
"On the inner arms and forearms of both upper limbs, the venous pattern is well-defined. Soft tissue of the upper limbs are bluish red."
"In the area of the glans penis and foreskin, the soft tissue is bright red."
"On the back and inner thighs and shins, the venous pattern is well-defined."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Igor Dyatlov
"Post mortem lividity of bluish red colour is evident on the posterior surface of the neck, trunk and extremities."
"The ear conches are of bluish pink colour and oval shaped."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Zinaida Kolmogorova
"Under the cowboy shirt on the left side of the chest is a military-style defensive mask." *[This might suggest that Zinaida was trying to protect eyes, as well as her nose, mouth from either a strong or dangerous light flash with the ability to blind, burn exposed skin or cause discomfort, the inhalation of vaporous, chemical or other airborne substance, that she considered toxic.].
"The skin of the face and hands are purple-red in colour."
"The ears are oval in shape and pink in colour."
"The lower limbs have no visible damage and are pinkish red in colour."
"The rest of the body and limbs are a pale red colour. There is a very pronounced venous system on the legs and feet."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Rustem Slobodin
"In the area of the centre of the forehead there are small abraisons that are brown red in colour with parchment density and slightly indented."
"The skin of the face is blue red in colour."
The soft tissue on the bridge and the top of the nose is brown-red in colour."
"The ears are ovulae in foiem and reddish blue in colour. On the outer edge of the right ear the soft tissue is brown-cherry-red in colour."
"The skin of the torso and the upper limbs down to the wrist joints, as well as the lower limbs are of
[blue?] pink colour."
"The venous system is well pronounced on the feet."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Alexander Kolevatov
“Around the defect located on the right cheek in the area of the lower jaw, the soft tissue is of a purple-green colour.”
[Note: The waistband of his sweater and the lower parts of his trousers later tested radioactive.]
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Nikolay Tibeaux-Brignolle
"The skin of the face, body and limbs is of a red-green colour seeping from the surface layer of the epidermis."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Aleksandr Zolotariov
There is no mention of skin colour or veins in the autopsy report.
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

Lyudmilla Aleksandrovna
"The skin of the face is of a yellowish brown colour."
[The Dyatlov Pass Post Mortem, Edited by Svetlana Oss, 15 January, 2017]

"... The skin colour was really unusual. Ivanov mentioned this in his report to me. Who else would have known such things if not him, a war veteran and a criminal investigator, he had seen many people frozen to death before. But nothing like this, ever ... I have strong suspicion, after all those expert examinations (particularly after the radiation analysis made by some order from the top authorities) that there had been tests of some secret weapon or a launch failure. By that time the USSR and the USA had signed the test-ban and nuclear weapons production cut-back treaty. New extra power devices needed to be created. It may well be that due to special secrecy, tests were conducted at locations unknown to the enemy. The students might have walked into a test area and got injured by fragments of a missile or something of the kind." Evgeny Fyodorovich Okishev, Deputy Head of the Investigative Department of the Sverdlovsk Oblast Prosecution Office
[Teodora Hadjiyska, Dyatlov Pass website, https://dyatlovpass.com/evgeniy-okishev-2013]

EVIDENCE OF RADIOACTIVE CONTAMINATION ON HIKERS CLOTHING

Search And Rescue, Mount Kholat Syakhl [Dead Mountain], The Northern Ural Mountain Ranges, Russia, 1959.

"With the assistance of scientists from the Urals Branch of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR I undertook extensive tests of clothes and some iergas of the deceased for presence of "radiation". Noteably, we compared the obtained results with the clothes and internal organs of people killed in car accidents or who had died a natural death. The results were amazing. Non-pecialsts would see nothing special in the results of analysis, but let me name just a few: the radioactive decay readings of the brown sweater that belonged to one of the tourists with bodily injuries showed 9900 counts per minute [spm], and after washing of the sample in water, the reading was 5200 cpm; this testified to the fact of washing off of the radioactive contaminaton. It should be noted that, before the bodies were found, they had been subjected to intensive washing with snow melt water: there were real streams of water flowing under snow. Hence, the radiation contamination at the moment of death of the tourists must have been many times higher,"
[p142, Journey To Dyatlov Pass: An Explaination Of The Mystery, Keith McCloskey, Self Published, 2016]

On the Dyatlov Pass Incident website, it states the following ...

Abnormally high readings show:
1.brown sweater on Dubinina - 9900 decays/min 150 cm2
2.trousers lower part on Kolevatov - 5000 decays/min 150 cm2 3.the waistband of sweater on Kolevatov - 5600 decays/min 150 cm2

Vladimir Levashov, the main radiologist of Yekaterinburg, conducted the examination. Upon rinsing the clothes, it was shown that contamination could be decreased by between thirty and sixty percent. The rinse was conducted in a standard test using cold running water for three hours.
Lev Ivanov: Could the clothes be contaminated above the normal level by normal circumstances without having been in the presence of a radioactive-contaminated place?
Vladimir Levashov: No
Lev Ivanov: Were the samples examined by you contaminated?
Vladimir Levashov: As mentioned in the conclusion, there is contamination by a radioactive substance or substances. Beta emitters were found on certain separately-sampled areas from the samples I received. For example, the sample from Dubinina (brown sweater), at the moment of examination, had a decay rate of 9900 beta particles per minute for 150 cm2. After rinsing, it displayed 5200 decays of beta particles per minute from 150 cm2.
Normally, contamination of beta particles from 150 cm2 should not exceed 5000 before rinsing. After rinsing it would be expected to find a normal level equivalent to the natural base level, which is provided by natural cosmic radiation for all people in a particular place. This is the normal rule for those who work with radioactive materials. From Kolevatov, the sweater yielded a display of 5600 particles per minute before rinsing, falling to 2700 particles per minute after rinsing. In your data it’s indicated that, before they were sent to us, all of these objects had been in running water for quite some time, which means they had already been rinsed.
Note: In the original document Levashov refers to Dubinina and Kolevatov as body ?4 and body ?1.
Lev Ivanov: Can we conclude that the clothes were contaminated by radioactive dust?
Vladimir Levashov: Yes. Contaminated by radioactive dust which fell down from the atmosphere, or these clothes were contaminated while working with radioactive substances, or via contact. This particular contamination exceeds the normal level for people who work with radioactive substances.
Lev Ivanov: What was the real degree of contamination of some objects considering that they were in running water for about 15 days?
Vladimir Levashov: One can guess the contamination of some parts of the clothes was many times more. But we must also consider that the clothes could have been washed with differing degrees of intensity.
[Teodora Hadjiyska, Controversy, Dyatlov Pass website, http://dyatlov-pass.com/controversy]
[Note: The original report for all findings for radioactive testing are published here - [https://sites.google.com/site/hibinaud/home/postanovlenie-o-naznacenii-fiz-tehn-eksp]

THE ATOM HEART
“The 22-year-old Korotayev, who had been assisting during the autopsies, was struck at the weird procedure in which all those present participated:”
“There were two huge vats of alcohol in the morgue, and we got into them, into the alcohol. After this, they immediately gave Prosecutor Tempalov a free pass to a resort for recovery. The doctors said that we would become impotent.”
“The members of a government commission that arrived from Sverdlovsk and Moscow, “seemed aware of some risks associated with being in the vicinity of the corpses”, and were having a binge in the nearby village of Pershino.”
“Bathing in alcohol seems to be an extraordinary precaution but it is not entirely unheard of. It was conventional wisdom in the 1950’s that alcohol washed away radiation.”
“Crews in submarines were dispensed a cup of alcohol and a cotton swab once a week to wipe themselves down. Sailors were told that red wine removes the isotopes from the inside of the body, while alcohol washes them off of the skin.”
“Whatever prompted Lev Ivanov toward radioactivity, for once in this otherwise slack investigation he seemed to have had a perfect guess, when he dispatched the clothes and biological samples of the victims to Sverdlovsk radiologic lab. The expertise concluded that three items of clothing were covered with radioactive dust.”
“I remember very well that when we took off their clothes and hung them up on clotheslines, we noticed straight away that the clothes had a strange light purple hue, even though they were of different colors…” – Henrietta Churkina, an expert on fabrics.
“Curiously, all samples of the bodily tissues turned out to be clean, with one bizarre exclusion: Kolevatov’s heart.”
“Like many other clues, these facts will be neglected by investigation. Many years would pass before prosecutor Lev Ivanov acknowledges that he had fudged the case, following an order coming from the highest ranks of the Communist hierarchy.”
[by Dimitry Romashko, http://dyatlov.looo.ch/en/p/the-atom-heart]

THE INEVITABLE MILITARY COVER UP

Vladimir Askinadzi And Nikolay Kuznetzov - Photo Archive Vladimir Askinadzi.

THROUGH THE SNOWY MILLSTONES
The bodies of the remaining four, Lyudmila Dubinina, Semyon Zolotaryov, Nikolai Thibeaux-Brignolle, and Alexander Kolevatov, were found in early May when the weather had improved. They were recovered from under a three-meter layer of snow in the bed of a stream, about 75 meters from the cedar tree.
For those taken refuge in the ravine, the odds were good: having more clothes on them in the first place, they cut the clothing off the dead bodies of their comrades, and wrapped themselves in the rags. In accordance with the rules of camping in the snow, they built a bedding of spruce branches.
But something caught up with them in this snowy haven.
It was of small wonder that the bodies had decayed significantly over these three months. However, a few things had astounded the rescue workers: gray hair, crimson-orange tanned skin, and empty eye sockets of the two bodies. Upon first seeing the cargo, the helicopter pilots refused to take the bodies on board and requested additional packaging to be provided.
[by Dimitry Romashko, http://dyatlov.looo.ch/en/p/through-the-snowy-millstones]

Searchers Dig Out The Bodies Of Semyon Zolotaryov, Alexander Kolevatov and Nikolai Thibeaux-Brignolles.

On the Dyatlov Pass Incident website, it states the following ...

Kolevatov's body (upper left) was found right next to Zolotariov's as if the latter was carrying or protecting him. Tibo's body was positioned 30 cm lower downstream.
When they tried to pull them out, they saw that Zolotaryov had a notebook in one hand and a pen in the other. Ortyukov saw this, grabbed the book, read it and immediately said scornfully: ‘He’s written nothing.’
Georgy Ortyukov, the Army Colonel in charge of logistics and helicopter support, was the only one who saw the notebook in Zolotoryov’s hand. Vladimir Askinadzy recalls that it was hard to identify the bodies as they found them, and it was Colonel Ortyukov who was ordaining who was who. ‘We were surprised,’ Askinadzy said, ‘because it was really hard to see, and no one could object or disagree.’
Askinadzy also mentioned that while he was present during that period, he felt very strongly that those in charge were not really interested in a proper investigation. He remembers that the lead investigator Lev Ivanov ‘did not even approach the pad of branches, didn’t take pictures, it seemed they already had a theory’. Askinadzy extends this accusation to Ortyukov, who was in charge of the whole rescue operation. He wrote: ‘If it was really so important to get this right, why didn’t they call for Yuri Yudin? He was the only one that knew them all, and could say for sure. I only knew Zina.’
The whole search operation was rushed. This pressure was from someone above – from Moscow, Sverdlovsk, or Ivdel. The atmosphere was very tense. Everyone was anxious for answers and awaiting for news.
Ortyukov and some soldiers took all the bodies from the stream, carried them up the bank and placed them on special stretchers to drag them across the snow, then took them up to the pass to the helipad. It was hard work, and they repeated the same process four times. A helicopter met them on the pass, but the pilots refused to take the bodies onboard, complaining this was outside their official duties. It has been said that the pilots knew the bodies were poisoned with radiation and, for this reason, didn’t want them in the aircraft. Ortyukov sent the following radiogram:
""This is a scandal! I and fourteen other people brought these bodies on our shoulders and they refused to take the bodies in spite of me insisting. As a Communist I am outraged by the behavior of the crew and ask you to inform the Communist Party leader about it. And I have to mention to you for clarity, these bodies are frozen.""

We packed them for transportation and there was no reason to refuse to take them. The medical expert refused to examine or to cut the bodies here on site. It is absolutely not dangerous from the point of hygiene. They are folded and covered in special impervious material. The crew said they would not transport them until they were in Zinc coffins.

At this point Colonel Ortyukov reached the limits of his desperation. He took out his pistol and threatened the crew. Vladimir Askinadzy intervened, after which the medical expert reorganized how the bodies should be packed for transportation, and they were finally airlifted for transportation to Ivdel.
[Teodora Hadjiyska, Dyatlov Pass website, https://dyatlovpass.com/the-den]

Search And Rescue, Mount Kholat Syakhl [Dead Mountain], The Northern Ural Mountain Ranges, Russia, 1959.

"For nothing is secret, that shall not be made manifest; neither any thing hid, that shall not be known and come abroad."
[Luke 8:17, The Holy Bible, KJV].
    

This website is part of my personal testimony and has been guided by The Holy Spirit and written in Jesus' name.

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