Selasa, 02 Desember 2014

The findings were Horrendous Europe Derived from Sukabumi  
           Temuan yang Menghebohkan Eropa Berasal dari Sukabumi

            Apparently, gutta-percha findings or gutta-percha, in antero Europe, really comes from Sukabumi. Precisely located in Plantation PTP VIII Sukamaju, Cipetir, District Cikidang, Sukabumi. The plant was built in 1885 in the days of the Dutch East Indies.


      "The information we received, well that rubber findings in Europe comes from our factory, which still continues to produce," said ADM Plantation PTP VIII, Sukamaju, Budhi Herdiana Tresnadi, in rubber processing factory Cipetir.


             Budhi resume, writing Tjipetir which is the object originated from Indonesia, namely Sukabumi. "There is no other plant in the world that manufactures rubber, and only just in Indonesia, namely in Cipetir, Sukabumi," he said.


Until now, said Budhi, the plant is still memproduksid and is currently exported to the Gelbi, Germany. "Usually this is used for gutta-percha medical, dental and manufacture of dental prosthetic limbs. Now the use of gutta-percha create an underwater cable coating, "he said.


              While the news circulated in the all European states, one day in the summer of 2012, Tracey Williams was accompanying her dog walks on the beach near his home in Newquay, Cornwall, England. When the woman saw a black square object, like a cutting board, among mounds of sand.


He approached it, touch it, it feels rubbery. I wonder what was the finding. There is only one clue: the word 'Tjipetir' - with a capital letter - large engraved in the middle. A few weeks later a similar object was found in a different beach, the waves washed to shore.


             Curious, Williams then did research the origin of the mysterious square object. He learned about the incident shipwreck, during World War I, also the legendary Titanic tragedy. And it turns out, similar objects also appear elsewhere still in continental Europe. Away by the waves, out of nowhere, confuse anyone who found it.


Speculation was rampant in 'Blue Continent'. Media such as the Daily Mail and the Times repeatedly ran an article about the mystery. Even with the French media, Lefigaro contains a long article about the same thing.

Tidak ada komentar:

Posting Komentar