Destination Moon? Belgium joins the space race0
- From Around the Web, Space
- November 26, 2016
Soon Belgium will enter the space race as The Interfederal Space Agency of Belgium (ISAB), inspired by the popular comic-strip hero Tintin.

Soon Belgium will enter the space race as The Interfederal Space Agency of Belgium (ISAB), inspired by the popular comic-strip hero Tintin.

Paint these days is becoming much more than it used to be.

Thanks to the research of Delft University of Technology, the Dutch police force will soon be able to use augmented reality to aid in investigations.

Thousands of inscriptions and petroglyphs dating back around 2,000 years have been discovered in the Jebel Qurma region of Jordan’s Black Desert. They tell of a time when the now-desolate landscape was teeming with life.

New evidence found by scientists has started to suggest that the people living on the islands of Melanesia could have human DNA the world has never seen.

A photo from NASA’s Curiosity rover on Mars set the Internet abuzz this week with claims that the robot had found a “thigh bone” on the Red Planet. But not so fast. That so-called bone? Just a weathered Martian rock, NASA says.

Pictures taken by a NASA satellite show a black spot where the Schiaparelli lander was meant to touch down Wednesday.

The Serapeum of Saqqara are ancient ‘boxes’ that have perfect precision. How are they so perfect?

Numerous maps have been discovered depicting our planet as it was before the last ice age. Many people claim that before written history, extremely advanced ancient civilizations existed on Earth and these ancient cultures, ignored by mainstream history, had well-developed cartography systems comparable in precision to the one’s we have today.

The HiRISE camera mounted on NASA’s Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter, which is exploring the history of water on Mars, snapped this photo of a circular depression on the Red Planet’s surface.



