Wednesday, February 01, 2012

Blue balls mystery close to being solved - Update

They have provoked much speculation — some serious, many tongue-in-cheek. But scientists believe they are close to solving the mystery of the blue balls that (apparently) rained down on a garden in Dorset. Bournemouth resident Steve Hornsby reported how the sky turned dark, then yellow, then blue, transparent, "jelly-like" balls began falling out of the sky during what he thought was a hailstorm.

He wondered if they had dropped out of a plane. Others thought they may have been eggs from a marine animal, possibly dropped by a bird. Some of the more fanciful suggestions were that they might be the bodily secretions of angels while others began to prepare for an alien invasion. A jar of the objects was taken to the school of applied sciences at Bournemouth University, which provided an initial analysis on Tuesday.



Research assistant Josie Pegg said: "Speculation on the nature of the mystery jelly balls has provided much entertainment, but now that we have possession of a sample we can rule out some of the early guesses. Having examined the balls under a high-powered microscope, we can discount living material." So not eggs are almost certainly not alien life-forms.

The clue may have been in the fact that the balls were only found in the garden and not on nearby roads or roofs. Pegg said: "The balls do look very much like the florists' hydrating jelly, as suggested by some eagle-eyed members of the public. "The next step will be to run chemical analysis of a sample of the mystery jelly, to determine its makeup, and at present a sample is desiccating in preparation for this process."

Previously.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

It's life, Jim, but not as we know it

Gareth said...

Reminds me of a neighbour of mine a few years ago. After a heavy hail storm he went into the garden to photograph the drifts of hailstones. He noticed in among the hail several small yellow balls about the same size of the hailstones. These balls were hard and smooth and didn't melt like ice. He couldn't decide what they were made from but they appeared to be some sort of resin. He got very excited about the apparently inexplicable phenomenon. He was about to phone the Fortean Times and local paper when his son returned home from school and identified the balls as pellets from his toy air pistol.

Occam's razor tells us the correct solution is the simplest one which explains all the observed facts. Why do people assume alien goo when florists gel is a much simpler solution?

Anonymous said...

Aren't they just the water based painball pellets found in the new Xploderz guns (http://www.xploderz.com) ?

Gareth said...

Are you just advertising?