File :-(, x, )
What are these? Mahanahka
Anyone knows what the heck these are?
I found those things on our lawn last summer (bout 10 of them).
they weight exactly 89 grams.
Those are about a size of a golfball and they seem to be somekind of a stone or something...
>> Anonymous
They appear to be balls.
>> Anonymous
could be kettle stones.
>> Anonymous
turtle eggs
>> Anonymous
nigger balls
>> Anonymous
they could be calcium nodles. called oolites
>> Anonymous
They could just be decorative stones. You occasionally see them in nature stores and the like. For some reason people really do have a need for perfectly spherical stones that way 89 grams and are roughly the size of a golf ball.
>> Anonymous
some sort of slow release plant food?
>> test them for low radioactivity Interested physics-nerd
Ask your local university/college/high school with physics equipment to test them for ionisizing radiation. I saw something like this in the town centre of Aachen, where they decorate a fountain at a central place.
Those are parts of a so-called "Kugelreaktor" (German: Ball-Reactor), where radioactive material was placed in balls which were then mixed with ceramic balls to regulate the chain-reaction in the nuclear test reactor of the local university. They are not harmful or anything, but they are parts of an nuclear test facility and I wonder how they've gotten into your backyard.
Greetings
>> Exar
They may just be Dorodangos, shiny mud balls often made in Japan, though if they all weigh the same, it's odd. check out this site to find out more about <A HREF="http://www.dorodango.com/gallery.html">Dorodangos.</A>
>> Anonymous
I forgot the name of these but it looks like fungus balls. I think they're edible.
>> Anonymous
bacterial dispensers?

do they taste anything? lemony? try lick one!
>> Anonymous
>>58129
I support the licking motion.

Even more so if it involves possible radioactive material.
>> Anonymous
They could be Horta eggs.
>> Anonymous
nigger eggs, just as I suspected.
>> Those balls are.. panda
The balls... I dont know the name of for them but companies do use them to crush sand/rock to smaller particles. Try breaking them-its impossible.
>> Anonymous
Lets just hope they don't touch.
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
I has the answer! Mega Jaw Breakers!!!!!!!!
>> Anonymous
they are negro eggs, you idiots
>> Anonymous
break one open.
>> Anonymous
are they inert?
>> Anonymous
Alien eggs
>> Anonymous
>>58501
on the contrary, they are not inert at all. as a matter of fact they are very ert
>> Anonymous
Do you live in europe?
>> Anonymous
     File :-(, x)
Cont.

<--- This is a table "simulating" a game of soccer. It uses 10 balls like those to play. They are found in bars near the arcade machines (At least here in Europe).
>> Sass
That is called a Foos Ball table >.>
>> Anonymous
TASTY BALUT
>> mahanahka
Yes I live Europe. Finland exactly.
I have tried to break one open, its like stone or somekind of ceramical material from inside.
>> Anonymous
battletoads.
>> Anonymous
more like buttletoades
>> Anonymous
>>57543
They look like jawbreakers to me. A kind of candy that you basically lick at like mad until it's small enough to suck on. They can kill you if you try to swallow them, so I suggest eating one off a stick instead of putting the whole thing in your mouth and sucking on it.
>> Anonymous
OH FUCK I JUST REALIZED I'M IN /an/ INSTEAD OF /a/. OH GOD MAKE IT STOP.
>> Anonymous
>>58644
I rofl'd
>> Anonymous
Tyrannosaurus eggs. BE CAREFUL!!!
>> Anonymous
U GUYS R ALL RETARDSS ITS THA DRAGONBALLS!!!
>> Anonymous
>>58777

FAT LOTTA GOOD IT DOES, THEY'RE CLEARLY INERT.
>> Anonymous
miniature planets
>> Anonymous
They're for sock darning.
>> Anonymous
>>58555

in b4 wiki search and looks of dispair
>> Anonymous
ostrich eggs?