AN UNUSUAL COMET DIVES TOWARD THE SUN0
- From Around the Web, Space
- October 26, 2017
Deep inside the orbit of Mercury, unusual comet 96P/Machholz is diving toward the sun today.

Deep inside the orbit of Mercury, unusual comet 96P/Machholz is diving toward the sun today.

Organized into a chronology that starts with “in the beginning” and ends with the advent of civilization, it brings together myths from many cultures (including the Sumerians, the Greek, the Maya and the Aborigines of Australia) and explores them in the context of current scientific discoveries. The result is a mind-blowing re-visioning of human origins through close reading of ancient texts.

New research shows that people with blue eyes have a single, common ancestor. Scientists have tracked down a genetic mutation which took place 6,000-10,000 years ago and is the cause of the eye color of all blue-eyed humans alive on the planet today.

Biologists who explore the Alaskan Arctic ecosystem aren’t just interested in polar bears. Some are also captivated by the “gelatinous species” hidden below the ice.

Lasers bounced off satellites replicate classic “delayed choice” experiment

Weak signal over ultrafine wires targets region linked to learning.

In this video two sisters from Ohio tell the story of how their father, a church minister, was taken to the sub-basement of the capitol and shown what appears to have been alien bodies and a craft. The person who led the tour was the longest serving Secretary of State, Cordell Hull, who retired in 1944.

In fairy tales, all it takes to transform a frog into a prince, a servant into a princess or a mouse into a horse is the wave of a magic wand.
But in the real world, transforming one living thing into another isn’t so easy. Only in recent years have scientists discovered how to do it, with tiny individual living cells.

Did Alien creatures or the “Others” as Robert Dean puts it actually have a hand in the manipulation of the Human race? Claims these others have been here since the beginning of time is nothing new.

Scientists and engineers are developing new hardware destined for the International Space Station to support experiments demonstrating how different organisms, such as plants, microbes or worms, develop under conditions of microgravity. Results from the Spectrum project will shed light on which living things are best suited for long-duration flights into deep space.



