Mr. Eisenberg. Let's take a look at 140, Mr. Stombaugh, and see if it is still present?
Mr. Stombaugh. If I can find where it was here. I doubt if it will still be present because the creases on the edges of the blanket are gone. I can't tell. It has been folded so much. No. I can't see it.
When I received the blanket in the laboratory, I noticed, when I put the blanket down flat, it had an area that was humped just like this.
Mr. Eisenberg. You have put a pencil underneath?
Mr. Stombaugh. Yes.
Mr. Eisenberg. And you have picked it up an inch or two, you have made a hump of about an inch or an inch and a half up from the rest of the blanket, is that correct?
Mr. Stombaugh. Yes. But it was very slight and you could hardly notice it, but I happened to look at the blanket from a distance and saw the hump and went over to measure it. But we tried to photograph it and we just couldn't get it. We tried various ways of lighting.
So I made a notation in my notes regarding that slight hump.
Mr. Eisenberg. Now, just to make the record clear, the hump was 10 inches long, and therefore you felt that the object immediately causing the hump must have been approximately 10 inches long, is that correct?
Mr. Stombaugh. Yes. The object causing the hump itself.