Olisikohan tuo Härän linkkaama kuva rekonstruktio Somertoninmiehen löytymisestä
(Reconstruction of the two horseback riders on Somerton Beach discovering the body.
Credit: Australian Broadcasting Corporation), koska tällainenkin kuva miehestä löytyy,
vai tämäkö olisi rekonstruktiokuva... tiedäpä tuota.. :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Somerton_ ... _Australia
https://www.whereis.com/sa/somerton-park-5044
Wikipediasta vielä Timeline :
April 1906: Alfred Boxall born in London, England.
16 October 1912: Prosper Thomson is born in central Queensland.
28 February 1918 H. C. Reynolds identity card issued.
1921: Jessica Harkness is born in Marrickville, New South Wales.
1936: Prosper Thomson moves from Blacktown in Sydney to Melbourne, marries and lives in Mentone, Victoria, a south east Melbourne suburb.
June 1944: Alf Boxall's daughter 'Lesley' is born.
August 1945: Jessica Harkness gives Alf Boxall an inscribed copy of the Rubaiyat over drinks at the Clifton Gardens Hotel, Sydney prior to his being posted overseas on active service. The inscription is signed "JEstyn".
October 1946: Jessica Harkness's son Robin is conceived (assuming a normal duration pregnancy).
Late 1946: Harkness moves to Mentone, Victoria to temporarily live with her parents. (The same Melbourne suburb in which Prosper Thomson had established himself and his then new wife ten years before.)
Early 1947: Harkness moves to a suburb of Adelaide and changes her surname to Thomson, the name of her future husband.
July 1947: Robin Thomson is born.
15 January 1948: Alf Boxall arrives back in Sydney from his last active duty and is discharged from the army in April 1948.
July 1948: "Prosper McTaggart Thomson, hire car proprietor, of Moseley Street, Glenelg" appears in Adelaide Local Court as defendant in a car sale dispute, dating from November 1947, establishing Prosper Thomson as active in Adelaide from 1947.
30 November 1948. 8:30 a.m. to 10:50 am: The Somerton Man is presumed to have arrived in Adelaide by train. He buys a ticket for the 10:50 a.m. train to Henley Beach but does not use it. This ticket was the first sold of only three issued between 6:15 a.m. and 2 p.m. by this particular ticket clerk for the Henley Beach train.
Between 8:30 a.m. to 10:50 am: There is no satisfactory explanation for what The Somerton Man did during these hours. There is no record of the station's bathroom facilities being unavailable and no ticket in his pocket to suggest he had visited the Public Baths, outside of the station.
Between 11:00 a.m. and 11:15 a.m: Checks a brown suitcase into the train station cloak room.
after 11:15 am: Buys a 7d bus ticket on a bus that departed at 11:15 a.m. from the south side of North Tce (in front of the Strathmore Hotel) opposite the railway station. He may have boarded at a later time elsewhere in the city as his ticket was the sixth of nine sold between the railway station and South Tce; however, he only had a 15-minute window from the earliest time he could have checked his suitcase (the luggage room was around 60 metres from the bus stop). It is not known which stop he alighted at; the bus terminated at Somerton at 11:44 am and enquiries indicated that he "must have" alighted at Glenelg, a short distance from the St. Leonard's hotel.[86] This stop is less than 1 kilometre (3,300 ft) north of the Moseley St address of Jessica Thomson, which was itself 400 metres from where the body was found.
7 p.m.–8 p.m.: Various witness sightings.
10 p.m.–11 p.m.: Estimated time he had eaten the pasty based on time of death.
1 December, 2 a.m.: Estimated time of death. The time was estimated by a "quick opinion" on the state of rigor mortis while the ambulance was in transit. As a suspected suicide, no attempt to determine the correct time was made. As poisons affect the progression of rigor, 2 a.m. is probably inaccurate.
6:30 am: Found dead by John Lyons and two men with a horse.
14 January 1949: Adelaide Railway Station finds the brown suitcase belonging to the man.
6–14 June: The piece of paper bearing the inscription "Tamám Shud" is found in a concealed fob pocket.
17 and 21 June: Coroner's inquest.
22 July: A man hands in the copy of the Rubaiyat he had found on 30 November (or perhaps a week or two earlier) containing an unlisted phone number and mysterious inscription. Police later match the "Tamám Shud" paper to the book.
26 July: The unlisted phone number discovered in the book is traced to a woman living in Glenelg (Jessica Thomson, previously Harkness). Shown the plaster cast by Paul Lawson, she did not identify that the man was Alf Boxall, or any other person. Lawson's diary entry for that day names her as "Mrs Thompson" and states that she had a "nice figure" and was "very acceptable" (referring to the level of attractiveness) which allows the possibility of an affair with the Somerton man. She was 27 years old in 1948. In a later interview Lawson described her behaviour as being very odd that day. She appeared as if she was about to faint. Jessica Harkness requests that her real name be withheld because she didn't want her husband to know she knew Alf Boxall. Although she was in fact not married at this time, the name she gave police was Jessica Thomson with her real name not being discovered until 2002.
27 July: Sydney detectives locate and interview the very much alive Alf Boxall.
Early 1950: Prosper Thomson's divorce is finalised.
May 1950: Jessica and Prosper Thomson are married.
1950s: The Rubaiyat is lost.
14 March 1958: The coroner's inquest is continued. The Thomsons and Alf Boxall are not mentioned. No new findings are recorded and the inquest is ended with an adjournment sine die.
1986: The Somerton Man's brown suitcase and contents are destroyed as "no longer required".
1994: The Chief Justice of Victoria, John Harber Phillips, studies the evidence and concludes that poisoning was due to digitalis.
26 April 1995: Prosper Thomson dies.
17 August 1995: Alf Boxall dies.
13 May 2007: Jessica Thomson dies.
March 2009: Robin Thomson dies.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamam_Shud_case