

This time Greenewald focuses upon former AATIP head Luis Elizondo's "gripe. John Greenewald goes into his "deepest dive" we can easily recall. sapiens, goodness only knows how bizarre our cosmic visitors or invaders may be.

If earthly animals can perceive the world radically different than H. If we do find life and reckon we can communicate with them, could we truly understand one another? Just consider Earthly critters, like Rich Reynolds who just read Ed Yong's An Immense World leading Rich to muse upon the Sensory Worlds Of Animals That Can Be Applied To ET. Logic isn't stopping Rocket Lab Self-Funding A Mission To Search For Alien Life In The Clouds Of Venus and Chris Young outlines the beginnings of such a maverick mission. Another question to be asked, "Why would humans even bother with Venus" considering it's just as hostile to us as Earth would be to putative invading aliens. But do long-standing tropes associated with alien invasion have a leg, or tentacle, to stand on? Because Lewis Dartnell would like a few words with you. Science fiction is fun and often has pretentions of being based in reality because the authors tend to be scientists, science fandom, or (ugh) positivists. Aside from this interesting approach to UFOs, it's heartening to see scientists in that war-ravaged country still prosecuting their work. Micah Hanks thanks Brett Tingley for the reference to "Cosmics" and "Phantoms": Ukrainian Independent Study Reveals Observations of Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. Kevin also offers two sightings the first is on Bill Puckett's UFOSNW site at Formation of Lights Change from Row to Triangle. Kevin Randle comments on the this in Project Galileo and Sightings for this Week. The article and embedded video explain the tripartite mission of Avi Loeb's brainchild, its status at its August 1-3, 2022, birthday celebration, and hopes for what may be accomplished by next year's anniversary meeting. Another unquestionable result of the new respectability of UFOs just celebrated its first year of existence, as Leonard David writes in On the Trail of Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon: The Galileo Project Looks Ahead. The article succinctly sets the battlefield between two branches of the government on the subject. have reported Congressional attention), Andrew Paul writes a straightforward piece about Congress' pressure on the DoD/IC to "get going" on UFOs. In an article perhaps as significant for its news outlet as for as what it notes (D. Curt Collins presents a "UFO Scrapbook: Artistic Depictions from the First Month of Flying Saucers." Around a score of these items are displayed and described.

Unsurprisingly, Robinson's first case-the 1961 Betty and Barney Hill abduction-is also that of the New Hampshire journalists, who add the 1965 "Incident at Exeter" as the complement "to have defined the terms of the alien experience ever since." And in a way also, The First UFO Pictures. New Hampshire Magazine's Bonnie Meroth and David Mendelsohn focus on their "Granite State" with UFOs (Unexplained Fantastical Observations). A couple of the encounters aren't so well-known, and there are some interesting short historical videos, the longest of which concerns the Levelland, Texas, supposed "ball lightning" that came to earth. Indy100's Breanna Robinson gives us The 9 Strangest Cases of UFO Sightings Throughout the Years. Here Nick Redfern discusses "balls of light" or "orbs," as referenced in Orfeo Angelucci's contactee stories, Weather Bureau guidance to the USAF regarding "ball lightning," and shapeshifting Bigfoot and black panthers in East Texas' Piney Woods. National Aviation Reporting Center on Anomalous Phenomenaĭifferent aspects of the larger UFO phenomenon.Stories are notĪrchived links may expire without notice.ĬONTACT: Please email your news tips to the News NOTICE: News stories appear in new browser windows. UNEXPLAINED MYSTERIES, UNORTHODOX THEORIES, STRANGE TALENTS, AND ANOMALIST IS A DAILY REVIEW OF WORLD NEWS ON MAVERICK SCIENCE,
