9/11 Chemical Evidence Studies
This channel is an ongoing investigation into chemical analysis of physical evidence left over from the collapse of WTC Building 7 and the Twin Towers WTC (1&2) on September 11th 2001.
We are asking other scientists to help us with the ongoing investigation. Please perform your own independent studies and publish your results to help build the body of scientific evidence.
The RJ Lee Group performed a study for Deutschbank of the WTC Dust Composition and Morphology:
www.scribd.com/doc/40444981
Also Google "Appendix C of the FEMA Report". If you are fire-wise or science-wise and you take a look at these scientific studies you will be thoroughly shocked at what you find. Please don't refer me to some stupid website which relies on psychological persuasion tactics and direct lies about evidence. Like claiming that "the Iron Microspheres came from an incinerator ash dump", without direct proof that they did come from an incinerator ash dump, and no scientifically (i.e. experimentally) based investigation was undertaken by any of these so called "debunkers" or "scientists" to perform any such detailed materials science examination of actual physical evidence. No WTC dust or debris were tested even though NIST has experts on nanothermite and even owns patents on it!
NIST Responses to FAQs, August 2006
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has had considerable difficulty determining a politically correct sequence of events for the unprecedented destruction of three World Trade Center (WTC) buildings on 9/11 (Douglas 2006, Ryan 2006, Gourley 2007). But despite a number of variations in NISTs story, it never considered explosives or pyrotechnic materials in any of its hypotheses. This omission is at odds with several other striking facts; first, the requirement of the national standard for fire investigation (NFPA 921), which calls for testing related to thermite and other pyrotechnics, and second, the extensive experience NIST investigators have with explosive and thermite materials.