RPC-806

tagnone

31

31

The following file is subject to Level 5 reclassification. Certain sections of this file require Level 4 clearance and above.

Unauthorized access without proper credentials will be logged, and the person responsible will be questioned pending for internal audit.

- Harpocrates, OIRS Director

alpha-yellow.png

Registered Phenomena Code: 806

Object Class: Alpha-Yellow

Hazard Types: h-grouped.png Grouped Hazard h-contact.png Contact Hazard h-explosive.png Explosive Hazard h-radiation.png Radioactive Hazard h-toxic.png Toxic Hazard

Containment Protocols: As part of an international agreement with the United Nations Anomalous Activities Committee, and administrative orders from Dr. Amanda Page, relocation of RPC-806 is to take place bi-monthly. During relocation proceedings, Mobile Specialized Team Delta-1 ("The Keepers")1 are to take charge of security, and transportation of RPC-806.

Any pending requests to experiment RPC-806 are to be approved by its adjacent Regional Management. A representative from the Office of Ethics and Review is to be present as a supervisor. Pending requests to utilize RPC-806 for testing purposes are to be automatically be denied. (See Addendum 806.03)

RPC-806 is to be contained in lead-lined storage container with a digital keypad, accessible only to certain Level 4 staff. Personnel unauthorized to remove RPC-806 from its containment will be detained, pending for administrative disciplinary.

Recovered RPC-806-2 instances are to be transported to OL-Site-806, three kilometers from Site-002. OL-Site-806 is to be established as a storage facility for currently existing RPC-806-2 instances. Access to this facility is to be permitted by the incumbent Director of OL-Site-806.

Previously contained at Site-014, personnel authorized to access RPC-806 are to equip a Level B hazardous materials (hazmat) suit to prevent inhalation of the bio-aerosols, or affected through physical contact. In addition, personnel are to go through a decontamination process as per caution.

The current whereabouts of RPC-806 is only known to a handful of personnel within the Directorate, and a select few with Level 4 and above. In the event that RPC-806 has been located, Protocol Exodus is to be initiated and RPC-806 is to be relocated to a designated secure off-site location.

8061.png

RPC-806

Description: RPC-806 is a deposited uranium ore that measures seventy kilograms, and displays a distinctive green luminescent crystal that appears to have been grown biologically. When a subject (designated RPC-806-3) comes within seven meters close, RPC-806 releases substances of bio-aerosols until the saturation density in the space around it becomes 0.72kg/m3.

When inhaling the bio-aerosols, or physically touching RPC-806, the digestive and skeletal system will mutate and convert into enriched uranium (designated as RPC-806-2) in various sizes and amounts, within the span of 20-30 minutes.

By each minute, the skeletal structure increases its density and causes the bones to easily become fragile, often broken when the bone becomes too dense and compresses with an RPC-806-2 instance. By 15 minutes, the skeletal structure will cease its density increase.

However, in the bone marrow, the production of erythrocytes traveling throughout the body will decrease by 46%, and begin to convert into small, rock-like minerals with high atomic properties. It's important to note that the erythrocytes, once solidified, will block some areas of the bloodstream, causing minimal blood flow throughout the body.

The human organs including the heart, lungs, stomach, intestine, and livers, will begin to convert into large clusters of RPC-806-2 instances, which reportedly causes immense chest-tightening during the process. Analysis during the conversion process revealed that the organic compound from the aforementioned organs mutates as a result of the solidification of erythrocytes coming into contact.

Within 20-30 minutes, RPC-806-3 will forcibly attempt to regurgitate the RPC-806-2 instances, but will most likely collapse onto the ground and expire as a result of asphyxiation.

RPC-806-2 instances expelled from RPC-806-3 instances do not appear to manifest anomalously, though they appear to emit small amounts of gamma radiation. Upon closer analysis, RPC-806-2 instances are shown to be more atomically active than a regular singular unit of enriched uranium when it absorbs a neutron that causes nuclear fission, because of this it releases a nuclear chain reaction that results in an unstable precedent level explosion.2

8062.png

Project Abraham, 1979

Addendum 806.01: Object History

In the early-1980s, President Ronald Reagan authorized a classified military project to enhance the nation's nuclear capabilities through anomalous means, which lead to the formation of Project Abraham. Headed by Colonel John Abrahamson, the Project allocated most its facilities at Maryland and Michigan to acquire sources of uranium for its defense research.

The military project was overseen by the Advance Research Projects Agency (ARPA), though the extent of the project for some inexplicable reason was transferred to the Strategic Defense Initiative Organization, in 1984.

During a mining excavation in ████████, New Mexico, a military engineer was reported to have collapsed from illness and died during the excavation of that area. In the aftermath of the incident, Project Abraham investigated the area and soon discovered RPC-806. Subsequently mined and transported to Fort Detrick, RPC-806 was potentially researched and tested on by the United States Government during the project's initiative.

While the United States Government kept Project Abraham's existence from the United Nations Anomalous Activities Committee, the project secretly continued its operations until in 1987 when an American defector involved in Project Abraham leaked its existence to the Committee for State Security (KGB). Two days after the leaks, the Soviet Union passed on the information to the World Security Council, which culminated into the condemnation by the UNAAC for the United States violations of the International Anomalous Accords.

Tensions between the United States and the World Security Council grew as President Reagan refused to shutdown the project's activities, though Reagan's actions were criticized by Ambassador Jeane Kirkpatrick which lead to her resignation the following April.

In 1991, President George H.W Bush, with advise from his National Security Advisor, ordered the shutdown of Project Abraham. Negotiations with the World Security Council concluded with RPC-806 being transferred to Authority custody, and the immediate roll back of anomalous weaponization within the United States. This came as a result of the US's commitment on reducing their nuclear arsenal with the Soviet Union, in the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty (START I).

Addendum 806.02: Internal Memo ██/██/1992

Following RPC-806's requisition from United States custody, concerns raised by the Authority Central Intelligence (ACI) lead to a series of security precautions as many informants within known entities have pursued an interest to obtain RPC-806.

To ensure nuclear security, the Office of Diplomatic Relations, in coordination with the World Security Council, pursued stringent international proceedings to protect RPC-806 from foreign acquisition, this resulted in MST Delta-1 being tasked by the Directorate.

Addendum 806.03: Summary Test Report 09/18/████

On September 18, ████, the Directorate authorized a highly classified experiment to observe the viability of RPC-806 as a fuel source for nuclear energy. The potential use of RPC-806 as a fuel source was supported unanimously by the Directorate. While Project Abraham had conducted nuclear testings through the use of RPC-806-2 instances, recorded documents of the project could not be ascertained due to known copies being expunged, or destroyed.

« RPC-805 | RPC-806 | RPC-807 »

Unless otherwise stated, the content of this page is licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 License