Richard Krege
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Richard Krege is an Australian engineer who carried out Ground Penetrating Radar (GPS) or electromagnetic scanning in 1999 of soil layers at the sites of the Treblinka extermination camp, and the Belzec camp.[1]
He claimed the subsurface soil layers in both locations did not show the pattern of disturbances that would be expected if mass graves holding up to a million bodies existed, according to the standard historical view. He does however admit there is a grave visible on WW2 aerial photos of Treblinka that could hold up to 10,000 in an area he didn't scan. The estimated number of exterminated at Treblinka alone is up to one million,[2] meaning his findings are considered incorrect by Holocaust historians.
As of Jan,2007, his is findings have yet to be published.
He attended the Iranian Holocaust Conference in 2006.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ Treblinka Ground Radar Examination Finds No Trace of Mass Graves. Institute for Historical Review.
- ^ a b Iran defiant as anger mounts over Holocaust forum (2006-12-12). Retrieved on December 15, 2006.
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