A flicker of light caught the edge of a metallic spiral as researchers in the Arctic settlement of Dikson stepped back from their contraption. It was Christmas Eve, 1990, and the air was already heavy with anticipation.
Inside the reflective aluminum structure—known as a Kozyrev Mirror—volunteers reported strange sensations: floating, timelessness, and a heightened sense of intuition. Outside, something even stranger was taking place. Aurora-like lights danced over the building, and witnesses swore they saw a disc-shaped object streak across the sky, leaving behind a fading trail.
Named after the astrophysicist Nikolai Kozyrev, these mirrors weren’t reflective in the conventional sense. Instead, they were designed to manipulate what Kozyrev called “energy-time” — invisible flows of information thought to connect every moment in history. Though he didn’t invent the devices, Kozyrev’s theories inspired their creation by Soviet researchers in Novosibirsk.
Kozyrev theorized that certain materials, particularly aluminum, could focus and amplify these flows of energy-time. Constructed from spiraled sheets of aluminum, these mirrors could house a single person in their reflective core, isolating them from external interference and amplifying internal phenomena.
Positioned above the 73rd parallel north, Dikson was chosen for its unique geomagnetic properties, thought to be a gateway to anomalies in time density.
The initial experiments produced unsettling results. Participants reported vivid visual patterns, sensations of leaving their bodies, and even glimpses of historical or ancestral scenes. But it wasn’t just subjective experiences that excited the scientists. Data from later large-scale trials revealed strange temporal anomalies...
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