Some quotes from the CNN articles;
*"Nine scientists will travel this month to probe the origins of the 50-60 meter (165-198 ft) tall structure – dubbed “the ET relics”
“The mystery pyramid sits on Mount Baigong, has three caves with triangular openings on its facade and is filled with red-hued pipes leading into the mountain and a nearby salt water lake”
“Rusty iron scraps, pipes and unusually shaped stones are scattered around the inhospitable and largely uninhabited area.”
“A study carried out by a local smeltery suggests the pipes are very old, Liu Shaolin, the engineer who carried out the analysis”*
Very interesting stuff. What are the odds that everything their study finds is inconclusive?
One last quote from The China Daily website;
*"The area is high in altitude, with thin and transparent air. It is an ideal place to practise astronomy, Qin said.
In fact, the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences has a large radio telescope just 70 kilometres from the site." * adjusts tinfoil hat
Well, the China Daily link (the third one) has more actual information than the CNN/Reuters links, which are mainly just speculation. And it says (preserved here in case they take the web page down):
IANA engineer, but this sounds like “slag” to me, and a Google search for “slag ferric oxide calcium oxide silicon dioxide” turned up Black Beauty[sup]R[/sup] Coal Slag Blasting Grit. http://www.reade.com/Products/Abrasives/black_beauty.html
The combination of rusty pipes leading down to a lake (for water cooling), coal slag, fly ash, and a “tower” sounds to me like a leftover and long-forgotten coal-burning power plant from, say, the 1920s, rather than a “launch tower for aliens”. The “caves” could simply be crumbling former office buildings, control rooms, etc.
(Alternatively, it might be an old mine of some kind.)
And anyway, aren’t alien launch towers supposed to be made out of mysteriously indestructible metal? If this really is an alien launch tower, then their metallurgy is still hopelessly stuck in the 19th century.
The ideal place to practice astronomy. Sheesh, anywhere in Tibet is the ideal place to practice astronomy. High altitude, clear skies, minimal precipitation.